SEO: PageRank Sculpting for 2011

My latest article at Ecommerce Developer, read it in full here.

 

As recently as 2007, search engine optimization experts were excited by the concept of PageRank or link sculpting, the practice of applying “rel=nofollow” tags to links of lesser value so that more link juice would flow to the other more valuable links. But now, in 2011, it doesn’t work the way most think it does, but there are more modern ways.

Let’s take a look at an example of the concept of PageRank sculpting so that everyone’s on the same page. In the original PageRank algorithm each page of content that Google has indexed had some amount of link popularity or PageRank based on how many inbound links it had. When that page linked to other pages, it passed its PageRank in more or less equal parts to the pages it linked to. In practice it’s a lot more complicated than this, and the algorithm has evolved dramatically over the last 13 years, but this is the basic gist. PageRank sculptors theorized that if they could restrict the flow of PageRank through some links, more PageRank would be forced through the other links — like opening and closing faucets to flow water to one area but not to another.

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Originally posted on Web PieRat.

6 Ways Developers Win the SEO Click

My latest article at Ecommerce Developer, read it in full here.

 

Search engine optimization doesn’t end with the battle for ranking position. With thumbnail images, social mentions, reviews, news, shopping, maps, paid ads and more clamoring for attention on search results pages, ecommerce sites need to show off their snippets to win the searchers’ clicks. It’s like mating season for birds: The more visually stimulating snippet may win the click over a better-ranking snippet with a plain chirp and dull feathers. Increasingly, developers need to know which metadata and coding choices can turn a common sparrow into a SEO songbird.

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Originally posted on Web PieRat.

Google’s +1 Expansion Boosts Search and Social

My latest article at Practical Ecommerce, read it in full here.

 

The Google +1 button now plays a much more visible role in promoting content in search and social marketing. Much like Facebook’s Like button, Google’s +1 button allows — as of last week — Google+ users to share a comment, an image, a headline and a snippet of text when +1’ing a page. Compared to the +1 button’s previously limited role of decorating blog posts and search results pages, the expansion connects some important dots in the evolution of Google as a social media payer. More importantly for ecommerce merchants, it represents an excellent opportunity to influence what gets shared, control how it looks when shared and increase visibility in search engines and in social marketing.

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Originally posted on Web PieRat.

SEO: Automating Keyword Selection with AdWords API

My latest article at Practical Ecommerce, read it in full here.

 

Optimizing a website around highly searched keyword terms can materially increase traffic from search engines. But identifying those keywords takes time. Few SEO managers relish the tedium of slogging through thousands of keyword variations — as critical as that process is to a search-engine-optimization program.

Thankfully, Richard Baxter at SEOgadget recently released a revolutionary free “Google AdWords API Extension for Excel” that automates the most tedious steps of the keyword research process: pasting keywords into the Google Keyword Tool, clicking search, downloading the results, and repeating many times.

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Originally posted on Web PieRat.

Google+: The Beginning of a Revolution?

My latest article at Practical Ecommerce, read it in full here.

 

The pieces are rapidly falling into place for Google’s increasing integration of “social signals” into its search algorithms. With the oddly isolated “+1” button launch at the end of March and the seemingly abrupt end of its agreement with Twitter in early July — see “Google Loses Access to Twitter Stream, Suspends Realtime Search,” on Mashable — it seemed that Google was dropping the social ball yet again.

Instead Google surged forward with Google+, its month-old social network based on sharing specific content to specific circles. From the users’ perspective, it’s like Gmail and GTalk combined with Facebook, but far more engaging. From Google’s perspective it’s the missing piece that connects the social dots between its products and provides a unique source of social-signal data to feed its ever-growing algorithms. Assuming Google+ realizes its potential, Google has the beginnings of a revolution on its hands.

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Originally posted on Web PieRat.