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Your SEO is weak my foolish friends
Thursday, 10 July 2008
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Another rant to all those SEO Jokers

You know what?…. I feel a rant coming on, either run screaming now, or hold on for the ride.

Ok…. Now listen up my little SEO apostles, stop looking for the secret sauce and the magic bullet. I am getting so damn tired of reading so called ‘tips’ of how you can get a leg up on the competition. I am talking everything from black hat to (so-called) keyword sniping and the LSI bandwagon. Stop creating garbage sites with the hope of monetizing it with some crappy thin affiliate schemes, PPC arbitrage or whatever the get-rich-quick flavour of the day is. Cease and desist with the 3 way links and arrest the development of your satellite sites. Just give it a break!

I am so tired of people posing as marketing professionals writing about how to game the system to make a few bucks. They are not marketers… they are snake oil sales types; so get a grip. The world has always had such hucksters and they have never really been considered savvy marketers. You see dear reader; you must learn to recognize the difference. If your SEO efforts are merely a preface to gaming the search engines for short term gain, your days are numbered. This is not a long term viable business model… I guess that’s why it is getting rich ‘quick’.

Wanna buy some PageRank?

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Hey Google NoFollow this!
Monday, 09 June 2008
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A Monday morning rant

I love Google as much as the next guy or maybe more than most… Not only the search engine and many apps and services I play with, but I also enjoy how the engineers think (Patent hound here ya know)… but the whole link FUD has finally started to irk me.

I have yet to write about the ‘nofollow’ fiasco… today it changes.

Are we simply a gutless bunch of weenies under the spell of the mighty G? Methinks it’s true.

Matt McGee is a guy I enjoy reading and have respected for some time … and still do. BUT this morning I noticed a post of his that was thanking some advertisers and highlighting some of there posts. He not only nofollowed the links to some of their recent posts, but felt he had to state that they were nofollowed. Good lord, is this what we’ve come to?

Eat my shorts

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Link Builders Guide to Historical Ranking Factors
Tuesday, 29 April 2008
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Because it's about time 

When in comes to doing SEO for Google, one thing is certain; you’d better know about backlinks. Given the fact that the core algorithm is based largely on ranking and detecting spam via links, it is certainly an area to be familiar with.

A while ago there was a re-release of a Google patent on temporal ranking factors which really was a watershed back in 2005 when it first came out, as were subsequent related patents. Analyzing the recent (re-released) publication for new anomalies gave life to the thought that it would be interesting to highlight a few areas as a bit of a refresher course.

For this post I am merely going to address the implications of temporal factors on link building programs.

 

The basics of historical factors

Just because a web page is 10 years old, doesn’t mean it is still relevant. It also doesn’t ensure that it is. In some situations fresh content can be more relevant than older content. The discovery data can be used to re-rank a document in a positive or negative manner…

Search engines, (such as Google) can use temporal data to analyze link profiles for anomalies based on discovery, (inception) dates;

…it may be assumed that a document with a fairly recent inception date will not have a significant number of links from other documents

And can be used for Spam detection;

While a spiky rate of growth in the number of back links may be a factor used by search engine to score documents, it may also signal an attempt to spam search engine. Accordingly, in this situation, search engine may actually lower the score of a document(s) to reduce the effect of spamming.”

 

Thus inception dates and historical data can be used for link velocity analysis.

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The Quest for Social Search Sensibilities
Tuesday, 22 April 2008
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Another chat with Bill Slawski

Where is the future of Search headed? Will algorithmic, link based, search engines continue to rule the roost? Or will the Web 2.0 world produce a social search engine that takes the world by storm? What about a mix of both?

These are some of the questions that have been bantered about with a few of my friends in the SEO and SMM worlds over the last few months. As you might imagine, the views are as varied as the individuals I talk to. Many of my mates in the social media marketing world tend to believe that people are the answer to search relevance and the death of spam. I personally can’t see a straight social search approach ultimately providing the most relevant results. Granted it is hard to say as there have been no widely-accepted/used social search engines and the premise requires a larger data set than we can see so far. So for me the jury is still out.

For me, search engines are always taking in implied or passive data, which in many ways is a form of social search engineering (behavioural targeting at very least).

Talking to the experts

I don’t really do a lot of interviews here, but I do enjoy bringing conversations public and over the next few weeks shall be asking a few friends to talk about this with me here on the Trail. First up; technical search geek and fellow algo-holic – Bill Slawski (we last chatted here)

 

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The perfect paid link honeypot
Monday, 14 April 2008
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John Chow is a rebel and a madman!

In my travels this morning I cam across a website that got me thinking. Specifically, I was thinking of what types of honey pots the fine folks at Google might set up to help them in their quest to squash the paid links industry. I mean people are not always the brightest when it comes to buying them; to that end I give you The Social Millionaire.

Million Dollar link screw

This site, that John Chow reviewed (and didn’t nofollow links to, duh), and describes as; “a site that tries combine the appeal of social networks with the goal of raising one million dollars.” – is another million dollar pixel game that essentially sells you a link. This is simply easy hunting for the fine folks at Google as the links do not have the ever popular ‘nofollow’ attribute.

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