Archive for September, 2005

Pass that joint over here!

Tuesday, September 20th, 2005

I just got an email lead for services. I’m not sure what this guy is smoking, but I’d appreciate if he’d pass some over here.

Here’s some of his email:

"….What we would like to do of course is achieve number one positions on all search engines for those words which are:  Horse, Horses, Sports, Software, Free Software, Bet, Gambling, Online Gambling, Sports Betting, Horse Racing.

….As I said at the beginning we don’t have a huge budget but we would be willing to discuss things with anyone willing to help us achieve our goal quickly at an affordable price…."

oh man….that must be Real Good Stuff to wack you right out into left field like that.

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New Age of Website SEO Tools

Tuesday, September 20th, 2005

2 new SEO Tools by We Build Pages - Age and Links Analysis Tools

Every day I get calls with people saying "I want to be #1 for "Green Widgets""
My first question to them is "How old is your site?"
Followed by my quickly running Yahoo’s linkdomain searches for the top sites to get an idea of what they’d be up against.

Now we’ve got a tool which does this much faster.

This tool shows the top 10 for a searched phrase, Yahoo’s linkdomains, and the age of the sites.
I’ll be using this tool on a daily basis.

Got a list of URL’s you want to check the backinks and age of?
Try this tool to enter in a list of URL to find the age and linkdomain’s for.

Enjoy!

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I like ‘em old.

Thursday, September 15th, 2005

When Leads come in, I review them, and either trash them, send them to Todd, or handle myself. Often when I send them to todd, I attach a small note like:

"Since 1999 (potential)" or "since 2003 - maybe"….today I sent one to Todd which said "since 1997"

Note, that these little notes don’t say "It’s a PR6" or "It’s got 500 links" or "product looks great" or anything like that….it’s the Year which means the most to me.

Why is the age so important? 

Let me try to make a case for the age of websites using a "Blue Widget" Test.
In viewing the top 10 sites in Google for literally "Blue Widgets" (without the quotes), I find these 8 sites rounding out the top 10 search results. Next to each site I put the month and year the site was registered on:

www.webmasterworld.com - 12/1999
www.nsa.gov  - can’t find, but it’s a gov and a pdf (double love…another story).
www.allfreeguide.com  3/2002
www.gruden.com  1/1998
www.ezinearticles.com  11/1999
www.newbiehangout.com  12/2001
www.seochat.com  6/2003
www.att.com  12/1993

The average age of these sites is around 6 years old and the newest site is seochat.com from which is just over 2 years old (and also shows hundreds of thousands of backlinks using Yahoo’s linkdomain search).

This theory holds that trying to rank high for "blue widgets" with a site registered in 2005 certainly can be done…but it will probably take a few years, if, during those years you’ve been working your butt off creating great content and gathering as many links as you can to your site.

New sites need Time for rankings. When the sandbox was first reported it was thought of as a 3 month phenonemom, then 6 month, then a year. I think some people are afraid to admit that it might be over a year depending on circumstances. I wish now that I hadn’t given a few sites thousands of links overnight early last year! I think those site are sitting in there longer now because of it.) now some sites are in over a year….it depends on several factors, but in 98% of the cases, you’re not going to see any "competitive" rankings for what I believe to be 6 months to a year and a half.  Keep in mind that if your website is less than a year old, chances are you’ll see almost no traffic from Google, no matter what you do.

In simple terms, the age of a website along with the age of backlinks, plays a large roll in rankings. Trusted Authority sites don’t spring up overnight (99%) of the time. Trusted Authorities come with Age and by sites obtaining constant new links over the course of Years.

See Google Sandbox Effect Papers and Google’s patent on Information retrieval based on historical data

There’s several methods of finding the "age" of a website.

To find when a domain was registered on you can use whois.sc or Networksolutions.com/whois/ 

But to get what may be a more accurate "age" would be to see when a search engine like Google might have found the site for the first time (when "birth" of the site might be - after all, someone could register a name and then not use it for a few years). To find when might have been close to "birth" use the Wayback Machine. We can figure that if the Internet Achieve found your site back then, then so did Google. You can also run a search, and grab the top 10 URL’s for that search and enter them into this age of website tool to get an idea of how old the top 10 sites are for your targeted phrases are at a glance.

Why?
Natural Link Growth.
Older sites have the advantage of gaining links within a community over the course of years.  New sites, unless they are spectacular and "of news" will not be able to even start to look into "fitting into the community" for a year or more (part sandbox - part Mike’s Filthy Linking Rich ideas). Google tends to like old established sites and trusts them more often over new sites.

The key is links over time.

The older the site the more "natural" the more probable that it has experienced some type of "natural link growth" and that it’s potential is far more than any sites started after the site in question.

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Pay Yahoo to remove your title tag??

Thursday, September 15th, 2005

Hello Yahoo! Why can’t you change this?

When filling out the form for submitting your site to the Yahoo, it is required that: (according to this page)

    "If your site is commercial, the title submitted must be the company name. Any request to change a business name to something other than its actual name will not be accepted. "

    So if my company name is "Bob Jones Inc." then there is no debate about what my Title will be.

    I can understand (maybe) if this was how you show names in a DIRECTORY LISTING (as in a phone book, since you know you’re in the correct Category when you’re digging down).

    BUT, I can’t understand why I’d pay you $299 to take away my coded title tag of what might be "Bob Jones Sells Gas Grills and Cooking Supplies - Free Shipping" and replace it with "Bob Jones Inc." in a SEARCH RESULT PAGE.

    Beween the 2 choices "Bob Jones, Inc" and "Bob Jones Sells Gas Grills and Cooking Supplies", guess which listing will get more traffic? - you guessed it, the one who didn’t pay Yahoo’s $299 to fu*k up their title tag. (I’m willing to bet most people just glance at the Link Text, and don’t read descriptions).

    It’s great if you’re company name is "Gas Grills and Cooking Supplies", but most real companies don’t name thier business "keyword keyword".

    I would like to submit sites, if I thought it would help me….and I’ve not doubt it would help my rankings in at least Yahoo, and it would prob help in Google and MSN to boot (old authority link), but at the cost of loosing your title tag?

    and - Hey Google, stop experimenting with showing DMOZ Descriptions - that’s just as bad!

    ———–

    In a search for "Search Engine Optimization" I see a few sites in the top 15 which get to use their title tags instead of thier directory listings…how are they able to do that??

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Scraping Whole Pages is not Cool.

Wednesday, September 14th, 2005

I shouldn’t be one to throw stones in glass houses.
I guilty of experimenting with lots of methods of trying to get traffic to websites - some methods have been blacker than others, so I’m in no way saying I’m "Mr. Clean".

I am however going to toss a small stone to those who steal content (like whole pages of it).

Each week I get an email from copyscape showing me the pages it’s found on the internet which have taken content from the webuildpages.com site. I then send emails to those in the US, and ask them to remove my content. I’ve given up trying to write to those in far off countries, where I know they don’t give a damn.

Often it’s scraper sites with good ole Adsense on the top. (Where’s the review??)

I found some great Content Stealing Spam today, not with the help of CopyScape, but with the help of Google’s new "Blog Search" Running a search for "Jim Boykin" found some good pages, as well as some nice Google adsense scraper spam. 

Here’s a great site I found #6 in a search for my name: http://internet-marketing-mastery.blogspot.co m (copy and remove the space in the ".com") They Stole a bunch of pages (entire content of those pages, including one of my internal pages, and did some slight modifications on it (which makes the page look like shit) tossed a few other pages content on their pages. and Crammed in Google Adsense into the top - 4 times none the less (you’re only allowed 3).

The page is interesting, there’s no google cache, but it’s #6 in a Google blog search for Jim Boykin

and, of course, Yahoo’s eating these pages up….yum…yahoo eats up Google Adsense Spam.

I Blame Yahoo and Google. Google for paying them, and Yahoo for being not smart enough to be able to remove them.

Why do I do i bitch about this form of "gaming the search engines?" It’s because I know that search engines don’t always get the right page when they find duplicate pages on the interent. It’s the reason I check Copyscape Weekly and write to content stealers.  It’s one thing to "game" but another to steal one mans content and risk hurting that site (if google guesses wrong - which they’ve been known to do, the site they stole from could get fuc$#d).

Game if you may. We all do to some extent…but please don’t take whole pages.

Ok…I threw a stone…I’ll try not to do that too often (but I know I’ve got 1 more coming for Yahoo).

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Forward Link Look Tool - V1

Wednesday, September 14th, 2005

In wanting to analyze "Links Out" a bit more (to better view the neighborhood) I had a programmer working on a tool to peek at title tags of pages being linked to.

I just got back a version of that tool ..it’s not quite was I was seeking - so it looks like there’ll be another tool after this one (the one I envisioned), but this tool is still pretty cool.  

Forward Link Look Tool - V1 - has issues with all browsers except IE (sorry). So use with Internet Explorer.

Shows the forwardlinks of any site, and the title tag of the page being linked to (helps envision the neighborhood).

————————-

Title Tag Forwardlinks Look Tool II - Coming Soon.

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When Getting Links is not the solution.

Tuesday, September 13th, 2005

With almost all prospective clients I speak with I end up telling them "You Need More Links" …. I can show them all sorts of fancy reports, and fancy tools, and we can do all sorts of fancy analysis….but the results are almost always "You Need More and Better Backlinks if you want to rank higher." Today I had a call with someone who owns some nice sites….one even had over 1/2 million backlinks already showing in Yahoo’s Linkdomain….freakin 1/2 million all natural backlinks….an SEO’s wet dream! Now get this….this guy is paying for Google Adwords for traffic because he has no rankings! His whole "problem"/"solution" was only that he needed "Optimized Content" with an "optimized internal link structure". That alone would put his traffic through the roof compared to what it is today. I can’t believe he’s paying for traffic when he could have 1000 times the traffic for free if he only knew how to use his site better. It was however a breath of fresh air to be able to say, "It’s not backlinks you need to focus on now - it’s "on-page SEO you need TODAY".

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