Nov 27 2008

Google Tech Talk about patents

Tag: News @ 10:19 pm

This is from Planet PHP:

Daniel B. Ravicher from PUBPAT did a great talk about the patent system and more importantly, how it doesn’t work. Worth watching if you are in the tech industry and if you’re interested in the subject. The PUBPAT’s mission statement: “PUBPAT Represents the Public’s Interests Against Undeserved Patents and Unsound Patent Policy”. Their website could be a bit more glamorous and less dry, but it is an important cause that affects all of us.

Read more:
Google Tech Talk about patents

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Nov 23 2008

Live Search is a tease

Tag: News, Wordpress @ 6:27 am

From SEO Greenhouse:

Found this referrer my server logs today: http://search.live.com/results.aspx?q=wordle Whoa, could my little website be ranking for “wordle” just a couple days after I mentioned it in a post? Of course not. But the MSN/Live Search bot sends phony HTTP_REFERER strings when it crawls sites. You know, I’ve seen faked referrers in my logs a lot. Here are a few actual examples to demonstrate the fine enterprises Microsoft is apparently emulating: http://www.feelgoodpharma.com/product/c/57 http://www.viagraoverstock.com/ http://www.igsvmortgage.com http://www.blacks-xxx.com/latina_sucks_monster_meat_rod.htm (I know this is old news . The fact that Microsoft is still spamming websites with faked referrers a year later is confounding. One thing is sure — the day I run into bandwidth overcharges for this server, msnbot is going to be given a starring role in my robots.txt file.)

Continue here:
Live Search is a tease

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Nov 21 2008

Google SearchWiki Launched

Tag: News, Wordpress @ 7:41 am

Here is a good post from Google Operating System:

As anticipated last month , Google’s experiment that lets you reorder and annotate search results is now live. Google SearchWiki should be available automatically if you are logged in to a Google account and it can be recognized by the visual clutter added to the search results. Next to each result, you should see three new options: a way to promote a web page at the top of the results, an option to remove results from the page (they’re still visible at the bottom of the page) and a feature that lets you share public comments about a result. After promoting a result, Google shows some unnecessary information about the other people who promoted the result. It’s important to remember that all the changes are saved to your Google account and they won’t affect the search results for everyone, at least not directly. If you want to see an aggregation of all promotions, demotions and comments, go to the bottom of the page and click on “See all notes for this SearchWiki”. This is the real wiki built by Google and it’s easy to access by adding &swm=2 to the URL of a search results page: http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=google&swm=2 . Comments are not very useful, although you could find insights for some obscure queries. The absolute number of people who promoted a search result is not very useful either, especially when you’ll see big numbers like 314,159,265. SearchWiki’s main idea is to give users the opportunity to manually customize the search results and make them more predictable. Since many people repeat common searches like [mail], [weather], [news] and Google’s results are constantly changing, it’s nice to pick your favorite results and display them at the top. If you can’t find a site you like, click on “Add a result” and manually add a page in the list of top results. Good things about SearchWiki : – you can now adjust Google’s results for your typical queries and save time when repeating the searches – use Google instead of bookmarking web pages – for unfamiliar queries, check the wiki to find a different ranking and potentially useful comments. Try to avoid the wiki for queries that are likely to be spammed. Bad things about SearchWiki : – visual clutter. The only way to remove the additional icons displayed next to each search result is to log out. – your changes are available only when you repeat the query and, in some cases, for similar queries (e.g.: [google.com] in addition to [google]). That means you can’t remove a web page or a domain from all search results – comments are public and there’s no option to write private notes (Google removed the option to annotate results in Google Notebook) – an obvious feature would be to get a permalink for your edited results, but Google doesn’t offer this yet – there’s no option to toggle between your edited results and the standard results (you’ll have to log out) – it’s difficult to reorder results, since the only action allowed is to place a web page at the top, after all the other promoted pages. If you promote the page again, it will become the first result. Google has always used people’s clicks to improve the quality of search results, so the new options could influence the ranking algorithms in different ways. “At this time we aren’t using SearchWiki to influence ranking but it is easy to see how that could happen in the future,” said Marissa Mayer . “Search is adapting to the Internet as it becomes a more participatory medium. Now you have people telling us specific things about how they’d like to see their search results. You could imagine if we do see a particular site (about which) people have a unanimous opinion, that might trigger external things. Like maybe we should check out our spam control,” suggested Cedric Dupont , product manager for SearchWiki and Google Knol.

Continue here: Google SearchWiki Launched

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Nov 13 2008

SEO Geographic Algorithms

Tag: News, Widgets @ 5:42 pm

This is from LinkedIn Answers: Web Development:

I have a .com website that is hosted in the US and the domain name is registered with a Canadian hosting company. I am trying to determine what the major search engines use as geographic information when attempting to display geographic search results. An individual doing a search in the UK will generally get UK sites first. If the same keyword search is done in the US – US sites will generally be first and the same applies to Canada. The question is if you are hosted in the US but regis …

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SEO Geographic Algorithms

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Nov 05 2008

SERP Rank Traffic Calculator

Tag: News, Wordpress @ 11:28 pm

Here is a good post from SEO Greenhouse:

What is the top position in Google worth? Obviously it depends on the search volume for whatever term you’re interested in. Some terms have a lot of search traffic, and others not so much. Whatever traffic you’re getting for a particular term now, I can tell you what you’ll get if it moves up or down in the SERPs. There’s a calculator after the jump… If you’ve been working in SEO for a while, you’ll probably remember when AOL published 20 million not-entirely-anonymous web queries , including the rank of the search result clicked by each user. This led quickly to an analysis of the clickthrough rate for the top 10 positions in the SERPs: Total Searches:9,038,794 Total Clicks: 4,926,623 Click Rank1: 2,075,765 Click Rank2: 586,100 = 3.5x less Click Rank3: 418,643 = 4.9x less Click Rank4: 298,532 = 6.9x less Click Rank5: 242,169 = 8.5x less Click Rank6: 199,541 = 10.4x less Click Rank7: 168,080 = 12.3x less Click Rank8: 148,489 = 14.0x less Click Rank9: 140,356 = 14.8x less Click Rank10: 147,551 = 14.1x less Chances are this chart was simultaneously invented by numerous SEOs, but this particular version was the work of “Breakpoint,” a member of the EarnersForum site (which went offline earlier this year). Breakpoint’s analysis used a sample of roughly half the clickthrough data available in the full AOL data set, and included only the top 10 positions. I’ve reworked the analysis using the full set of AOL data, and extended it to cover the top slots on page two of the SERPs. This makes it easy to calculate the value of any movement, up or down, within the first 12 results. To use the chart, find the row matching the old (or current) rank of your page, then trace your finger to the right, to the column representing the new (or desired) rank. Multiply your current traffic (measured in clickthroughs per day/week/etc) by the number in the resulting cell to find out what your traffic would be, given the SERP rank change you’ve projected. The color is simply a visual hint about whether you’re going to gain or lose traffic. (If the table looks like too much trouble, use the JavaScript SERP Rank Traffic Calculator below.) It’s not always realistic to think you can move your site to #1, at least not in the short term, but it’s reasonable that some focused effort could bump it up 3-5 positions. What’s that worth? For example, if you’re getting 500 visits per day from your #8-ranked listing, you can project that you’d get 1415 visits per day if you could jump to position #3. (500 * 2.83 = 1415) This is a great tool for justifying SEO investments — or for avoiding them. If you can put a dollar value on each clickthrough, you can quickly calculate the relative value of each increase in ranking. By the same token, for some longer-tail searches you might find that there’s just not enough upside potential to justify any expense at all. Let’s revisit our earlier example: if you make an average $5 cpm for clickthroughs from search, and you think it will cost you $1500 (for content development, linkbuilding, etc.) to realize that +5 jump in the SERPs, your net gain of (1415-500=915) 915 new visitors per day would take 328 days to pay for itself: $1500 / (915 visitors/day * $5/1000 visitors) = 328. That seems like a questionable investment — but at a higher CPM, maybe it would make more sense. Not only can you use this grid to project the value of and therefore justify SEO investments, you can prevent yourself from sinking a ton of energy into elevating your rank for keywords that just aren’t driving enough revenue to matter. SERP Rank Value Calculator 1. Enter current traffic level: clickthroughs per day 2. Select old rank in Google SERPs: 1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   3. Select new rank in Google SERPs: 1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   Expect this traffic level: clickthroughs per day By the way, I’ll be at PubCon in Las Vegas next week. I’d be interested to hear your take on ROI for SEO. Please get in touch!

More here: SERP Rank Traffic Calculator

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Oct 31 2008

Is PageRank the Ultimate Measure of Online Influence?

Tag: News, Uncategorized, Wordpress @ 10:37 pm

Here is a new article from Vanessa Fox. Nude.:

Shared by Chris Dean Quite simply, why PageRank doesn’t always matter Steve Rubel recently wrote a blog post about measuring online influence. He concluded that Google PageRank is the ultimate way to measure online influence . I completely disagree. I agree with him that we need better measures and the ones that we have are looking through a glass darkly (at best), but PageRank is probably one of the worst measures around. John Mueller asked me if I ever worried about PageRank , so I can answer that question while I explain why I disagree so much with Rubel. What is PageRank anyway? First, a bit of explanation about PageRank. Two entirely different things are called “PageRank”. There’s the Google toolbar PageRank, which is represented by integers 1 through 10, and then there’s the internal PageRank number that Google uses as one of its many (hundreds of) ranking factors. When I say PageRank doesn’t matter (and I say it a lot), I’m talking about the toolbar PageRank. The internal PageRank that Google uses does matter, but it’s far from only thing that matters. At the simplest level, PageRank (both toolbar and internal) is a measure of a page’s link popularity. How many links does a page have and how authoritative are those links? Why do I think PageRank doesn’t matter? Rubel is talking about the toolbar PageRank in his post. So why do I say it doesn’t matter while he says it’s the “ultimate measure”? It’s updated infrequently. As Matt Cutts has said , it’s updated every “few months”. So, it’s generally pretty stale data. When you see a 5, there’s really no way of knowing if the site is currently a 5 or was a 5 two months ago but is now a 7. Or a 2. (”Real” PageRank is computed continually.) It’s not very accurate. The internal PageRank is not an integer number 1 – 10. It’s something much more precise. So even without the staleness problem, there’s still an accuracy problem. It can easily be gamed. Link schemes , link exchanges, and paid links have been around for a long time. Google is always working to be one step ahead, but these techniques can work for a time. Link builders have an advantage. Certainly savvy SEOs and link builders know how to get quality links. One site could have more online influence and engagement but just not have an owner who knows about link building. The toolbar number may be obfuscated. Google has to maintain a delicate balance of giving as much information as possible to web site owners, while not giving away enough to let spammers impact the quality of search results. This was one of the hardest parts of my job when I ran Google Webmaster Central. I talked to B&B owners who just wanted people to know their inns existed. And I talked to black hats who used every loophole to get their viagra sites on the first page. The Official Google Webmaster Central blog talked about obfuscation that Google did late last year. In this particular case, sites were selling text links that weren’t marked as advertising and their major selling point was the high PageRank of the site. By reducing the visible PageRank, those sites could not as easily sell links. PageRank doesn’t necessarily correlate to ranking. Matt mentioned this recently on Sphinn , when he said “Even if you don’t show much PageRank, Google still has 200+ other signals we use in our ranking. It’s definitely common to see lower-PageRank sites ranking above higher-PageRank sites–which tends confuses the people who obsess too much about PageRank and who don’t focus on other factors that search engines might use to rank pages”. Why does Rubel think PageRank is the “ultimate”? Rubel sees things a little differently. He said: “Page Rank is something you earn by producing high quality content that people link to” – Unfortunately, that’s not entirely correct. An average piece of content might get lots of links via a link builder, or if the person writing the content is popular, or even if the person writing the content is universally hated and lots of people link to the content to trash it. A piece high quality content may be very engaging and may influence a lot of people, but those people may not be linkers by default. And really, if what you’re really looking to do is measure what content gets the most links based on the argument that something with a lot of links has a lot of influence because the links themselves raise awareness about that content, then use Yahoo! Site Explorer , which will give you up-to-date and accurate link counts. Don’t use a rounded, out of date number that approximates link counts. “It enables you to influence people on the Internet’s biggest stage – Google – and just as people are searching for the topics you are knowledgeable about. This means it amplifies your influence because the press start at search engines when researching stories” – As noted above, PageRank is one of more than a hundred factors in determining ranking. It happens all the time that a site with a lower toolbar PageRank will rank above high PageRank sites. Ranking isn’t just about link quantity. It’s about crawlability, extractability, quality content, link quality, anchor text…. Well, a lot of things . “Page Rank is channel agnostic and takes the entire online ecosystem into account. It judges you based on links from all kinds of sources, not just people who live in the same fish tank. In other words, it goes beyond people who hang out on Twitter who love people who Tweet or bloggers who link to other bloggers, etc. It eschews the echo chamber” – Again, not exactly. It may eschew the echo chamber but it rewards a savvy link builder. And some audiences are more likely to link than others. For instance, marketing blogs link out all the time. Recipe blogs are getting better at linking. But some newspapers don’t link at all, or provide the link as text. Some audiences aren’t the type to have sites from which they can link, so you can only see their involvement through things like comments and subscriber numbers. And for some audiences that do control sites, linking just doesn’t cross their minds. It’s not something they think about doing. I’m not the first person to disagree with Rubel on this. Michael Gray mentioned it on Twitter and Rubel replied “I know Page Rank is not perfect. But it determines your footprint on Google and that’s why it’s the ultimate influence metric.” If there’s one thing that PageRank is not, it’s the determination of your Google footprint. The internal “real” PageRank isn’t even that. Lots of things go into determining your Google footprint. His discussion in the comments goes further down this path of misunderstanding what PageRank is. He agrees with someone in the comments who says that “PageRank is the sum of all other measurements.” It’s not. It’s one measurement added in with a whole bunch of others. Others in the comments do point this out. In fact, James Joyner said “My site has gone from PR7 to PR4 for no apparent reason. At the same time, my visitors, commenters, and social media followers have gone up. My content gets syndicated at Newsweek. It’s included in Google News, for goodness sakes. But my PR has plummeted. Oddly, however, my Google traffic has not.” So how do you measure online influence? But what of Rubel’s actual question? How do you measure online influence? I would ask why you want to measure it. I spoke at the eMetrics summit a few months ago and the big discussion was around measuring engagement. But what is actionable about that measure, even if you are able to track it down? It could be that the measure is different depending on your goal. If you’re coke and you want to sell more soft drinks, then the only measure you care about may be increased sales. Rubel mentions that unique visitor counts are largely empty numbers as hordes of visitors might come from search but then leave immediately. Well, sure. That’s why you have to measure bounce rate. And conversion. And understand that the goal isn’t to rank #1 in Google and get a lot of traffic, it’s to rank highly for search queries that your customers who want to buy your products are doing. But I’ve talked about that before . If you’re a blogger and you don’t sell anything, then you might care about getting more readers. Or you might make money from advertising. Or maybe you want to get famous so a big time magazine wants you to write for them. “Online influence” is a nebulous term, at best. I do agree that we need better measures. That we’re overwhelmed with numbers and we don’t know what’s actionable or useful. And I think you can measure the impact and value of things like social media that don’t correlate directly to sales. These are the things I spend a lot of my time thinking about these days. But I’m pretty sure toolbar PageRank is not that magic measure.

Continue here: Is PageRank the Ultimate Measure of Online Influence?

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Jun 26 2008

PHPBay

Tag: Plugins, WordpressThe Affiliate Marketeer @ 6:47 pm

 PHPBay

PHP Bay is a great set of PHP scripts for managing Ebay Affiliate campaigns and quite conveniently it also comes as a wordpress plugin.

You can manage everything from a small RSS list to a whole site based on Ebay content easily and depending on your particular niche it can pay for itself very quickly.

It also gives the ability to manage ads from other affiliate networks such as TradeDoubler, Mediaplex and Affilinet, and if you are a programmer yourself you can extend the functionality of it in custom ways.

There is an active and useful support forum and community behind the product which always a bonus!

If you visit the website it will explain all the main features of the product in a clear and concise way so I’ll not go into depth any further here aside from re-iterate the general features list and say that of the plugins of this type I have found to date phpBay is one of the most complete and easy to use out there!

Features:

  • Add real earning potential to your site with Ebay listings.
  • Keyword rich content to please search engines and drive traffic.
  • Easily integrates into Wordpress 2.x as a plugin.
  • Requires PHP 4+ with CURL Support.
  • List items by keyword(s) and category number.
  • Works with EPN, TradeDoubler, Mediaplex and Affilinet.
  • Support for 16 different countries.
  • Display listings in columns or rows.
  • Now features paging.
  • Geo IP Targeting.
  • Specify a min/max number of bids.
  • Specify a min/max price.
  • Exclude items by keyword(s).
  • List items by zip code.
  • Find items by a specific seller.
  • Video tutorials to walk you through installation and options.
  • Comprehensive manual with complete documentation.
  • Mask affiliate links and images with SEO URLs option.

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