Screen Shoot Google Insights

Screen Shoot Google Insights

Google has released a fun new little tool to assist in market research called Google Insights.

It seems to have been a pretty hush release because I am on a lot of email lists and I read the top blogs on the subject and no one has been talking about it (yet).

This tool combines Google Trends and Google Keyword Research Tool. It allows you to filter results by country and time frame. It is a great way to figure those great little niche markets that we are always talking about.

I have been using it to discover the best route to take for exchangemyad.com. I have discover that world wide there is a great need for ad exchange programs. So, the main phrase that I wanted to be found under is Ad Exchange Program. At the time of this writing there was listed a little over 6 million web pages for that phrase. We (exchangemyad) is ranked 4th!.

Pretty amazing. Take advantage of this tool, it is well worth your time!

Google Insights

Demystifying the “duplicate content penalty”

I found this on google’s webmaster blog

Duplicate content. There’s just something about it. We keep writing about it, and people keep asking about it. In particular, I still hear a lot of webmasters worrying about whether they may have a “duplicate content penalty.”

Let’s put this to bed once and for all, folks: There’s no such thing as a “duplicate content penalty.” At least, not in the way most people mean when they say that.

There are some penalties that are related to the idea of having the same content as another site—for example, if you’re scraping content from other sites and republishing it, or if you republish content without adding any additional value. These tactics are clearly outlined (and discouraged) in our Webmaster Guidelines:

  • Don’t create multiple pages, subdomains, or domains with substantially duplicate content.
  • Avoid… “cookie cutter” approaches such as affiliate programs with little or no original content.
  • If your site participates in an affiliate program, make sure that your site adds value. Provide unique and relevant content that gives users a reason to visit your site first.

(Note that while scraping content from others is discouraged, having others scrape you is a different story; check out this post if you’re worried about being scraped.)

But most site owners whom I hear worrying about duplicate content aren’t talking about scraping or domain farms; they’re talking about things like having multiple URLs on the same domain that point to the same content. Like www.example.com/skates.asp?color=black&brand=riedell and www.example.com/skates.asp?brand=riedell&color=black. Having this type of duplicate content on your site can potentially affect your site’s performance, but it doesn’t cause penalties. From our article on duplicate content:

Duplicate content on a site is not grounds for action on that site unless it appears that the intent of the duplicate content is to be deceptive and manipulate search engine results. If your site suffers from duplicate content issues, and you don’t follow the advice listed above, we do a good job of choosing a version of the content to show in our search results.

This type of non-malicious duplication is fairly common, especially since many CMSs don’t handle this well by default. So when people say that having this type of duplicate content can affect your site, it’s not because you’re likely to be penalized; it’s simply due to the way that web sites and search engines work.

Most search engines strive for a certain level of variety; they want to show you ten different results on a search results page, not ten different URLs that all have the same content. To this end, Google tries to filter out duplicate documents so that users experience less redundancy. You can find details in this blog post, which states:

  1. When we detect duplicate content, such as through variations caused by URL parameters, we group the duplicate URLs into one cluster.
  2. We select what we think is the “best” URL to represent the cluster in search results.
  3. We then consolidate properties of the URLs in the cluster, such as link popularity, to the representative URL.

Here’s how this could affect you as a webmaster:

  • In step 2, Google’s idea of what the “best” URL is might not be the same as your idea. If you want to have control over whether www.example.com/skates.asp?color=black&brand=riedell or www.example.com/skates.asp?brand=riedell&color=black gets shown in our search results, you may want to take action to mitigate your duplication. One way of letting us know which URL you prefer is by including the preferred URL in your Sitemap.
  • In step 3, if we aren’t able to detect all the duplicates of a particular page, we won’t be able to consolidate all of their properties. This may dilute the strength of that content’s ranking signals by splitting them across multiple URLs.

In most cases Google does a good job of handling this type of duplication. However, you may also want to consider content that’s being duplicated across domains. In particular, deciding to build a site whose purpose inherently involves content duplication is something you should think twice about if your business model is going to rely on search traffic, unless you can add a lot of additional value for users. For example, we sometimes hear from Amazon.com affiliates who are having a hard time ranking for content that originates solely from Amazon. Is this because Google wants to stop them from trying to sell Everyone Poops? No; it’s because how the heck are they going to outrank Amazon if they’re providing the exact same listing? Amazon has a lot of online business authority (most likely more than a typical Amazon affiliate site does), and the average Google search user probably wants the original information on Amazon, unless the affiliate site has added a significant amount of additional value.

Lastly, consider the effect that duplication can have on your site’s bandwidth. Duplicated content can lead to inefficient crawling: when Googlebot discovers ten URLs on your site, it has to crawl each of those URLs before it knows whether they contain the same content (and thus before we can group them as described above). The more time and resources that Googlebot spends crawling duplicate content across multiple URLs, the less time it has to get to the rest of your content.

In summary: Having duplicate content can affect your site in a variety of ways; but unless you’ve been duplicating deliberately, it’s unlikely that one of those ways will be a penalty. This means that:

  • You typically don’t need to submit a reconsideration request when you’re cleaning up innocently duplicated content.
  • If you’re a webmaster of beginner-to-intermediate savviness, you probably don’t need to put too much energy into worrying about duplicate content, since most search engines have ways of handling it.
  • You can help your fellow webmasters by not perpetuating the myth of duplicate content penalties! The remedies for duplicate content are entirely within your control. Here are some good places to start.

Posted by Susan Moskwa, Webmaster Trends Analyst

September 3rd, 2008 by

Google released their first attempt at knocking Microsoft out of the web browser world.

Google Chrome

At first glance it feels a lot like a cross between Mozilla FireFox and Opera. It has the tabs across the top and special bookmarks links. These are classic from FireFox. It has six windows on the front for your Most Visited Sites, and down the right it has your most recent google searches

Google Browser Chrome

Google Browser Chrome

They have a Google Chrome learning center titled What makes Google Chrome different.

It appears that google Chrome browser is a learning application, which means that it tracks what you look at most and changes or refines what it shows you based off of past results. The app is pretty small so it is well worth your time to try it out.

Get Googel Chrome Here

September 3rd, 2008 by

This is one of the most looked over things in building a site.

What is a Favicon? Also called Favicon.ico

This is the little 16px by 16px icon that shows up in the address bar when you go to a site.

It also shows up in the bookmarks when you add a page to your favorites.

This a great way to enhance your site so that people will reconize you.

Well how do you make one?

For adobe photoshop there is a plugin that you can download and install that will allow you to save as a .ico file.

Go here:

http://www.telegraphics.com.au/sw/

For me I had to download the Windows package, which you can also get by clicking here:

http://www.telegraphics.com.au/sw/icofo … -1.3b3.zip

Now all you have to do is extract icoformat.8bi to your plugins folder in adobe. Now the next time you start Adobe you will have the option to save, make, create, and load .ico files!

There is a little glitch with this when using Vista. I intalled it. started photoshop and it didnt work it had a little error saying I could save out.

So after searching the forums I came accross the solution. Just restart your PC and it works.

Good luck and Have fun

boakes.org has written a nice little plugin for Google Analytics. It works very effectively, It was pretty simple to install.

Download from HERE

Steps:

1. rename the file to googleanalytics.php

2. Open Filezilla

3. Log in and navigate to /wp-content/plugins

4. Upload the googleanalytics.php file

5. Login to http://yoursite/wp-admin

6. Click on PLUGINS (it is on the right side {far right side{)

7. Enable your the Google Analytics Plugin

8. Leave back office open go to your google analytics account

9. Create a new site. They will give you some code you must look through it and get the (UA-12345-6) number.

10. Copy the UA #

11. Go back to the wp-admin

12 Click on link at top that says google anaylytics.

13. Paste in the code

14. Save it and your done

That is how easy it is.

Now just go back to your analytics and verify that it has been installed correctly.

Have you ever wondered how to look up a keyword phrase to see how many people are actually searching that phrase in google?

TechnoBloggie:

this is the answer

Go check it out you will want to click on option #4

www.technobloggie.com

You will see the max bid on an adwords campaign , the trend of searching over the past few years.

and  a lot of other really cool stuff.

July 30th, 2008 by

Joomla eXplorer is a File- and FTP - Manager. It allows you to edit files, delete, copy, rename, archive and unpack files/directories directly on your server. You can - Browse Directories & Files - Edit, Copy, Move and Delete files - Search, Upload and Downloading files - Create new files and directories - Change file permissions (chmod) and much more This script is based on QuiXplorer 2.3.1

Download it Here

This a the tool that you will use to update and change the header image in your template.

also you can browse all of your files in joomla. This has Ftp built into it.

July 26th, 2008 by

If you are thinking about using Joomla as your base of your website. You have two options the most stable version Joomla 1.0.15 or the New version that is based off of web 2.o Joomla 1.5.

The newest version is really cool. There is a lot of great add features. But to get started you should got thru the Joomla! 1.5: Quick Start Guide.

This is the 1st step in building your site correctly. Do yourself a favor and dont waste time trying to figure it out yours self.

Follow this guide.

It’s important to collect email addresses to build your email marketing list.  Here is a list of where you should include the actual sign up form or a link to one on a web page. If you can include the form yourself, great! If not, atleast link to it.
Your Homepage - If you don’t have one on your home page, get one there now.

Your Sub-pages - All of them! If you don’t have the space to put an actual form on all of your sub-pages, at least have a “Newsletter Sign Up” link on them.

Your Blog - Not everyone subscribes to RSS to get information from your blog, so you’ll need to include an actual form for your readers to sign up, or a “Sign Up For Our Newsletter” link to it. You don’t want to lose the opportunity to get email addresses from people who might be interested in knowing about your regular updates.

Your Purchase Confirmation Page - Someone has just hopefully had a great experience purchasing from you, why not ask them to join your list right then and there?

A Landing Page - If you have a separate landing page you send people to from your search engine pay-per-click campaigns, include a newsletter sign up form on it. If they don’t purchase from you, they might at least sign up to your list, then you’ll be able to attempt to get them to purchase later on.

The Footer of all Outbound Emails - Any email you personally send or any email your employees or customer service people send one on one, should have the link to your opt-in form.

This is just cover the basics. There are a lot of other creative ways to opt -in people. Look for more listings to come about this topic.

I’ve avoided listing methods aimed at only minimizing your time in the sandbox—as opposed to methods of actually escaping it—as those are basically paramount to good SEO practises, which is obviously way beyond the scope of this article.

- Buy out old domains—Even if a domain is low on inbound links, the age factor will almost certainly be enough for it to have expired the sandbox; typically a year is good age to ensure a domain is sandbox free; if possible negotiate with original owner keeping the WHOIS record as similar as possible to prevent triggering a fresh sandbox cycle. Domains never indexed in Google, no matter what how early registration date aren’t likely to avoid being sandboxed.

- Buy recently expired domains—Some theory as above, but applied to domains that have actually expired. There is some evidence to suggest very recently expired domains can avoid a fresh sandbox cycle. A good measure might be domains expired but still indexed in Google.

- Collect the low hanging fruit—While sandboxed you aren’t going to rank well for competitive terms, but you may be able rank for low traffic ones. Large quantities of low traffic terms can be just as rewarding, and if you target the right ones you’ll be strengthening the theme of your site for when your more competitive terms are freed from the sandbox.

- Drag your competitors down to your level—We really don’t condone or recommend this; it’s listed here for completeness sake, and to make you aware of tactics that can be used against you: If you can’t aspire move upwards, the second option is to drag your competitors downwards, into and below the level of the sandbox. StuntDubl summarizes the main blackhat tactics at the disposal of those who willing to cross the line. Even if we did recommend this, logistically it’s a non-option since you’ll no doubt have hundreds or thousands of competitors’ pages ahead of you, not to mention that each one of those competitors can use the same tactics against you.

- Buy your way in—Irregardless of sandbox status, you should almost always consider doing at least one PPC campaign for each of your targeted terms, in order to estimate the ROI before spending resources targeting terms organically.

- Explore non-Google traffic sources—Getting sandboxed clearly illustrates the danger of putting your eggs in one basket. Consider using your time in the sandbox to explore and make full use of other sources of targeted traffic, learn to survive without being at the whim of Google.

- Hijack your competitors rankings—Again, we don’t condone or recommend blackhat tactics: Performing a 302 redirect to one of your high ranking competitors from a non-sandboxed domain (preferably of higher PageRank/trust than theirs) can sometimes succeed in hijacking their SERP listings. So that the traffic can be gleaned, the redirect can be cloaked for the benefit of the Google-bot, with regular visitors being redirected to your sandboxed site. Again, we do not recommend this, and only on small number of occasions have such tactics been publicized to work.

- Use subdomain from developed site—According a quite a few experts; since sandboxing appears to be based on 2nd level domain, hosting your site on a subdomain of an already established domain will avoid the sandbox. If you redirect all pages to the new domain once the site appears thoroughly indexed; it should reportedly maintain a non-sandboxed status.

- Acquire “trusted” links—A fair amount of SEOs have claimed to have escaped the sandbox by acquiring enough “trusted,” high quality authoritative links. The most often cited source for links capable of freeing a site are high profile news sites; .gov, and .edu sites; and dmoz.org. That this method can immediately free you from the sandbox is somewhat contested, but most seem to agree that it can either a) avoid being initially sandboxed, or b) shorten your stay. At least one Google engineer is reported to have supported the theory that high quality backlinks can negate the sandbox.

- Perhaps you aren’t sandboxed after all—Consider and research into the possibility that you aren’t sandboxed and instead simply suffering the effect of a very ineffective SEO campaign. For this purpose SEOMoz.org offers the Sandbox Detection Tool.

10 steps by webmasterbrian

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