Please Help: Take + Share the 2012 SEOmoz Industry Survey

Posted by randfish Buenos Dias, marketers! Today's an exciting day! We're thrilled to announce the launch of the 2012 SEOmoz Industry Survey . It's been 2 long years since our last survey , which had more than 10,000 respondents from around the world and produced some of the most detailed public information ever assembled about the growing fields of SEO, social media, content, and organic/inbound marketing. This year's survey is projected to take about 20 minutes to complete (I took it twice and the first time took me ~18 minutes), and it's slightly more detailed than 2010's. We know this means a little extra work on your part, but we hope it will be worth it as we make the data available to all. The survey's available now in SurveyMonkey and will run for 5 weeks to collect data (but early participation's greatly appreciated): The following sections contain the 54 total questions (49 if you're not an agency/consultant): Your Work in the Industry Questions for Consultants, Freelancers, and Agencies Learning and Improving Internet Marketing Skills Internet and Inbound Marketing Scope and Process Inbound Marketing Tools and Tactics SEO Tools and Tactics Social Media Tools and Tactics Predictions/Opinions for Internet/Inbound Marketing Read more »

Tools and Tactics to Test Your Product/Marketing Before You Launch – Whiteboard Friday

Posted by randfish It takes a lot of time to put together a marketing plan, a landing page, or even a full web app. Wouldn't it be nice to know if what you are building is going to be successful? In this week's Whiteboard Friday, we will be covering the tools and tactics that you can use to test your product before it launches. Please leave your own methods and feedback in the comments below! Video Transcription Howdy, SEOmoz fans and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week we're talking about tools and tactics to test your product and marketing before you launch it, before you invest in it. The reason this is so important is because you're going to take a lot of time and effort to put together a marketing plan, to put together a landing page, to put together a product, to put together an entire website. A lot of the time, before you launch, you get this feeling like, man, is this thing going to really work? I don't know if it's going to take off. I want to be sure. This is exactly why you need these types of tactics because you're going to build something. You're going to make that investment, but if you can learn a lot about your customers, about the visitors who are coming to you, about your percentage of conversion, about how much people like the product, about what they're going to do, if you can get that critical feedback before you actually launch, you're going to do so much better. This ranges all the way from how you title a blog post to a full launch of a software product or a physical product in the real world or whatever it is that you're marketing and making. So, number one, this is very, very common, but a lot of people still don't use it, which is before you invest in all of the organic inbound marketing channels, things like SEO and social media and content marketing and doing press outreach and outreach to bloggers, all of this stuff, you can actually buy keywords through PPC just by flipping on an AdWords account, flipping on a Bing account, and then sending traffic from the search results over to your web page. Now, the thing about this is you need to have a functional page here, but it doesn't have to be complete. What you really want to understand is you want to understand how interested are these visitors in my potential product? This doesn't necessarily require building out the full feature set, building out the full product. In fact, we can do number two, beta launch pages. So what this is, is essentially saying here is a teaser. In this page, I'm going to put a teaser of the product that I'm going to build, but it's not yet ready. I will build it soon, or I'll have it launched soon. Sign up to get the email invitation and maybe leave us some feedback about the wire frames or the comp screens that we've shown here. Or ask them two or three survey questions on this beta sign-up page. You can embed something from Google. You could embed a Survey Monkey survey. The Google hosted apps has got a survey that you can embed on web pages. Whatever it is, you can get that feedback by buying traffic to this page or earning it and building out merely a launch page that says, "Yes, I will build this in the future." If you get that feedback that's basically, boy, we got 1,200 visitors to the page and only 6 of them filled out that they wanted the email and the rest bounced. There's something wrong with this. There's something wrong with the product. There's something wrong with how the page is selling the product. People are not excited about it. The people you thought would be most interested in this, the ones who are searching for exactly what you're trying to build, are not interested, and that's a really bad sign. But knowing that before you invest all of that engineering effort and architecting effort and production effort and the launch is so much better than launching blind. Number three, you can actually do this and apply it, not just to products but to blog posts, to content, to viral content, to an infographic, to a video, to whatever you want by running surveys, simple surveys of your users or your friends or a beta test list or you can use anonymous lists. You could try something like Mechanical Turk or a FIVERR - we'll talk about those in a second - to test that viral content or even to give you preferences of topics and headlines. So I could run a survey that's headline one and headline two and headline three, and oh look, most of my users said they liked headline two. That's the one I'm going to go with. That's the one that clearly has got the best launch potential, and I can use that survey data to say, "Oh, this is the right thing to do," and therefore increase my chances of having that viral impact. Number four, the final one here, there are some great tools that you can use to get this testing up front, and this is not just testing necessarily for a headline or for an app, but to test landing pages and their performance, to test a marketing campaign or a message, even to test the usability of websites. I urge you to give these a try, so Feedback Army, this is something that SEOmoz's own Joanna Lord likes a lot, Five Second Test. You can buy users on FIVERR to perform more complicated tasks. This is $5 a task, but a lot of people will volunteer their time, and you can certainly put up ads saying, "Hey, for five bucks I want you to go run through this whole app and give me all these feedback pieces." For 50 bucks, you can get 10 people giving you serious, intensive feedback. Silverback App. There are a few other ones that will let you do this as well. Now, the process here is less about which specific tool you use and what you use it for and more the idea. What I want you to take away from this is that you don't have to do the full launch to get feedback and know how things are going to perform. You can do early, up front testing, make something people want, and then see it perform in the wild in a wonderful, wonderful way. All right, everyone. Thanks for joining me for this edition of Whiteboard Friday. See you again next week. Video transcription by Speechpad.com Sign up for The Moz Top 10 , a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read! Read more »

How Sitelinks Are Quietly Costing You Conversions

Posted by psharp This post was originally in YouMoz , and was promoted to the main blog because it provides great value and interest to our community. The author's views are entirely his or her own and may not reflect the views of SEOmoz, Inc. “It’s official, Google is broken and my career is over. Time to hide under my desk.” A bit extreme? Yes. But, if you saw what I saw a month ago, your reaction would’ve been exactly the same. Let me explain. It was 5:55 pm and I was getting ready to go home after a good day’s work at Practice Fusion. “Let’s just do a quick Google search for Practice Fusion so I can give myself a high five before I head home.” That’s when the panic started. Here’s what my non-personalized search for Practice Fusion pulled up in position #1: Do you see what I see?! Ranking #1 for the term Practice Fusion isn’t our high-converting, very helpful homepage….it’s our rarely looked at, poor converting Executive Team page! OMG to the extreme! Plus, where the heck did our Google+ page go? First thought: “Breathe. Crawl out from under desk.” Second thought: “Maybe this has something to do with the fact that Google knows I’m in San Francisco.” “Let’s change that to ‘United States’ and see what happens.” Aww, that’s more like it. Seeing these results is like being reunited with a best friend, or some really good hot chocolate – it’s warm and soothes the soul. PracticeFusion.com is back on top, and our Google+ profile is showing up. Nice. Then I tried changing my city to Oakland, Palo Alto, Mountain View, and New York. Every time I got my good results. Why the heck was the location of San Francisco giving me such a hard time? “Are you responsible for this Lou Seal?!” “Okay. Good.” Still in a bit of disbelief I wandered over to Google Analytics to check a few things. First, I wanted to see where natural search visitors to our Executive Team page were coming from. Were most of them from San Francisco? Short answer: yup. Next, I wanted to see if the natural search visitors to the Executive Team page were coming in from the Practice Fusion keyword. It turns out that ALL visitors to the Executive Team page came in by searching for Practice Fusion . Clearly, something is happening. Or, as Martin Lawrence would say… Normally I’m all for Google local results, but this just seems wrong. Why would someone in San Francisco want to see our Executive Team page over our home page? It seems like a really bad user experience, especially since the Executive Team page has less authority (by far) than our home page. Executive Page Home Page Why was Google doing this? Was it something I said? Apparently, Google thinks that the Executive Team page will be a good result for people in San Francisco. But, why do they think this? The answer to this question is the same as the answer to “How many licks does it take to get to the center of a Tootsie Roll pop?” “The world may never know.” However, after a lot of research, here’s my best guess. And, believe me, it’s a bit surprising. Under certain conditions, Google will swap a sitelink for the main search result. Yup, I said it. Here’s how I tested it. On February 7 th I went into the “Sitelinks” section of Google Webmaster Tools and demoted the Executive Team page as a sitelink for our homepage URL. I was working a hunch. After a few weeks went by, I looked at the results. Visits to the Executive Team Page from San Francisco As you can see, about a week and a half after demoting the Executive Team page from sitelinks, it no longer shows up as the first result (even if you’re in San Francisco) and the visits to that page go to zero. This must mean that Google feels comfortable bumping a sitelink up to the main search result! But why bump up the Executive Team Page? It’s only a guess, but it looks like it’s because of the sites linking to that page. Of the external sites with links pointing to the Executive Team page, 60% of them have “San Francisco” at least once on the page. Of the sites linking to our home page, only 29% of them mention “San Francisco”. Perhaps this is influencing Google. Conclusions Under certain conditions, Google will bump a sitelink up to the main search result. Potentially, and sneakily, costing you conversions. One of those conditions might be the content of the sites linking to you and the location of the person searching. Suggestion Look in analytics to find the landing pages for your branded searches. If they’re not going to your home page, it might have something to do with your sitelinks. Check it out, you might just save yourself some conversions. Sign up for The Moz Top 10 , a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read! Read more »

Upcoming changes in Google’s HTTP Referrer

Webmaster level: all Protecting users’ privacy is a priority for us and it’s helped drive recent changes . Helping users save time is also very important; it’s explicitly mentioned as a part of our philosophy . Today, we’re happy to announce that Google Web Search will soon be using a new proposal to reduce latency when a user of Google’s SSL-search clicks on a search result with a modern browser such as Chrome. Starting in April, for browsers with the appropriate support, we will be using the "referrer" meta tag to automatically simplify the referring URL that is sent by the browser when visiting a page linked from an organic search result. This results in a faster time to result and more streamlined experience for the user. What does this mean for sites that receive clicks from Google search results? You may start to see " origin " referrers—Google’s homepages (see the meta referrer specification for further detail)—as a source of organic SSL search traffic. This change will only affect the subset of SSL search referrers which already didn’t include the query terms. Non-HTTPS referrals will continue to behave as they do today. Again, the primary motivation for this change is to remove an unneeded redirect so that signed-in users reach their destination faster. Website analytics programs can detect these organic search requests by detecting bare Google host names using SSL (like "https://www.google.co.uk/"). Webmasters will continue see the same data in Webmasters Tools —just as before, you’ll receive an aggregated list of the top search queries that drove traffic to their site. We will continue to look into further improvements to how search query data is surfaced through Webmaster Tools. If you have questions, feedback or suggestions, please let us know through the Webmaster Tools Help Forum . Posted by John Mueller , Webmaster Trends Analyst, Switzerland Read more »

Link Building Tools We Use at Distilled

Posted by willcritchlow We recently gathered up a list of all the link building tools and resources we turn to daily across the company at Distilled. In the "TAGFEE" spirit of generosity, we thought it might be useful to others and we thought we'd share it here. Link building is on our minds a lot of the time anyway, but even more so at this time of year in the run up to our Linklove link building conferences Read more »

Achieving an SEO-Friendly Domain Migration – The Infographic

Posted by aleyda This post was originally in YouMoz , and was promoted to the main blog because it provides great value and interest to our community. The author's views are entirely his or her own and may not reflect the views of SEOmoz, Inc. Domain migrations are one of those activities that even if in the long-term can represent a benefit for an SEO process -- especially if the new domain is more relevant, has already a high authority or give better geolocalization signals with a ccTLD -- can represent a risk for SEO because of the multiple tasks that should be performed correctly in order to avoid potential non-trivial crawling and indexing problems and consequential lost of rankings and organic traffic. I did a quick research for a recent domain migration that I needed to supervise and realized that even if there are a few resources there isn't a complete list covering all of the different aspects that should be taken into consideration in order to implement and validate a domain migration from an SEO perspective. The checklist - infographic for an SEO friendly domain migration process With so few information I did a checklist compiling the different activities I needed perform during the different phases of the migration process -decision making, planning, implementation and monitoring- that was a great help to keep me on track and I would like to share through the following "infographic / checklist" where I have also added some of the tools that I used: You can click on the image above to see a bigger version of the image or download it directly from here . Please note that this is a checklist for a domain migration process -not a redesign, URL structure change or CMS migration, that would add more complexity and additional validation to the specified phases-. Some of the articles that were of help to build this checklist -and would be also great if you can take a look at- are: Surviving a Site Migration [An SEO's Guide] Domain Migration – An SEO Case Study Best practices when moving your site Moving your site The 10 Step Site Migration Process SEO Migration Plan – Failure to Plan is a Plan to Fail Web Site Migration Guide - Tips For SEOs I hope all this helps you as much it has helped me! What other aspects do you take into consideration to make sure SEO don't suffer from domain migrations? Sign up for The Moz Top 10 , a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read! Read more »

Web Site Migration Guide – Tips For SEOs

Posted by Modesto Siotos This post was originally in YouMoz , and was promoted to the main blog because it provides great value and interest to our community. The author's views are entirely his or her own and may not reflect the views of SEOmoz, Inc. Site migrations occur now and again for a various reasons but arguably are one of those areas many SEOs and site owners alike do not feel very comfortable with. Typically, site owners want to know in advance what the impact would be, often asking for information like potential traffic loss, or even revenue loss. On the other hand, SEOs need to make sure they follow best practice and avoid common pitfalls in order to make sure traffic loss will be kept to a minimum. Disclaimer : The suggested site migration process isn't exhaustive and certainly there are several alternative or complimentary activities, depending on the size of the web site as well as the nature of the undertaken migration. I hope that despite its length, the post will be useful to SEOs and web masters alike. Phase 1: Establishing Objectives, Effort & Process This is where the whole migration plan will be established taking into account the main objectives, time constrains, effort, and available resources. This phase is fundamental because if essential business objectives or required resources fail to get appropriately defined, problems may arise in the following phases. Therefore, a considerable amount of time and effort needs to be allocated in this stage. 1.1 Agree on the objectives This is necessary because it will allow for success to be measured at a later stage on the agreed objectives. Typical objectives include: Minimum traffic loss Minimum ranking drops Key rankings maintenance Head traffic maintenance All the above 1.2 Estimate time and effort It is really important to have enough time in your hands, otherwise you may have to work day and night to recover those great rankings that have plummeted. Therefore, it is important to make sure that the site owners understand the challenges and the risks. Once they understand that they, it is more likely they will happily allocate the necessary time for a thorough migration. 1.3 Be honest (...and confident) Every site migration is different. Hence previous success does not guarantee that the forthcoming migration will also be successful. It is important to make your client aware that search engines do not provide any detailed or step-by-step documentation on this topic, as otherwise they would expose their algorithms. Therefore, best practice is followed based on own and other people’s experiences. Being confident is important because clients tend to respect more an expert's authoritative opinion. This is also important because it can impact on how much the client will trust and follow the SEO's suggestions and recommendations. Be careful not to overdo it though, because if things later go wrong there will be no excuses. 1.4 Devise a thorough migration process Although there are some general guidelines, the cornerstone is to devise a flawless process. That needs to take into consideration: Legacy site architecture New Site architecture Technical limitations of both platforms 1.5 Communicate the migration plan Once the migration process has been established it needs to be communicated to the site owner as well as to those that will implement the recommendations, usually a web development team. Each part needs to understand what they are expected to do as there is no space for mistakes, and misunderstandings could be catastrophic. Most development agencies tend to underestimate site migrations simpl because they focus almost exclusively on getting the new site up and running. Often, they do not allocate the necessary resources required to implement and test the URL redirects from the old to the new site. It is the SEO’s responsibility to make them realise the amount of work involved, as well as strongly request the new site to move first on a test server (staging environment) so implementation can be tested in advance. No matter how well you may have planned the migration steps, some extra allocated time would always be useful as things do not always go as planned. In order for a website migration to be successful, all involved parts need to collaborate in a timely manner merely because certain actions need to be taken at certain times. If things do not seem to go the desired way, just explain the risks ranging from ranking drops to potential revenue loss. This is certainly something no site owner wants to hear about, therefore play it as your last card and things are very likely to turn around. 1.6 Find the ideal time No matter how proactive and organised you are, things can always go wrong. Therefore, the migration shouldn't take place during busy times for the business or when time or resources are too tight. If you're migrating a retail site, you shouldn't be taking any risks a couple of months before Christmas. Wait until January when things get really quiet. If the site falls into the travel sector, you should avoid the spring and summer months as this is when most traffic and revenue is being generated. All that needs to be communicated to the client so they make an ideal business decision. A rushed migration is not a good idea, thus if there isn't enough time to fit everything in, better (try to) postpone it for a later time. Phase 2: Actions On The Legacy Site There are several types of site migrations depending on what exactly changes, which usually falls under one or more of the following elements: Hosting / IP Address Domain name URL structure Site Architecture Content Design The most challenging site migrations involve changes in most (or all) the above elements. However, for the purposes of this post we will only look at one of the most common and complicated cases, where a web site has undergone a radical redesign resulting in URL, site architecture and content changes. In case the hosting environment is going to change the new hosting location needs to be checked for potential issues. Whoishostingthis and Spy On Web can provide some really useful information. Attention needs to be paid also on the geographic location of the host. If that is going to change, you may need to assess the advantages/disadvantages and decide whether there is a real need for that. Moving a .co.uk web site from a UK-based server to a US one wouldn't make much sense from a performance point of view. In case the domain name is changing you may need to consider: Does the previous/new domain contain more/less keywords? Are both domains on the same ccTLD? Would changing that affect rankings? 2.1: Crawl the legacy site Using a crawler application (e.g. Xenu Link Sleuth , Screaming Frog , Integrity for Mac ) crawl the legacy site making sure that redirects are being identified and reported. This is important in order to avoid redirect chains later. My favourite crawling app is Xenu Link Sleuth because it is very simple to set up and does a seamless job. All crawled URLs need to be exported because they will be processed in Excel later. The following Xenu configuration is recommended because: The number of parallel threads is very low to avoid time outs The high maximum depth value allows for a deep crawl of the site Existing redirections will be captured and reported Custom settings for site crawling with Xenu Link Sleuth 2.2 Export top pages Exporting all URLs that have received inbound links is more than vital. This is where the largest part of the site’s link juice is to be found, or in other words, the site’s ability to rank well in the SERPs. What you do with the link juice is another question, but you certainly need to keep it into one place (file). Open site explorer Open Site Explorer offers a great deal of information about a site’s top pages such as: Page Authority (PA) Linking Root Domains Social Signals (Facebook likes, Tweets etc.) In the following screenshot, a few, powerful 404 pages have been detected which ideally should be 301 redirected to a relevant page on the site. Majestic SEO Because Open Site Explorer may haven’t crawled/discovered some recent pages, it is always worth carrying out the same exercise using Majestic SEO, either on the whole domain or the www subdomain, depending on what exactly is being migrated. Pay attention to ACRank values, pages with higher ACRank values are the most juiciest ones. Downloading a CSV file with all that data is strongly recommended. Webmaster tools In case you don’t have a subscription to Open Site Explorer or Majestic SEO you could use Google’s Web Master Tools. Under Your Site on the Web -> Links to your site you will find Your Most Linked Content. Click on 'More' and Download the whole table into a CSV file. In terms of volume, WMT data aren’t anywhere near OSE or Majestic SEO but it is better than nothing. There are several other paid or free backlinks information services that could be used to add more depth into this activity. Google analytics Exporting all URLs that received at least one visit over the last 12 months through Google Analytics is an alternative way to pick up a big set of valuable indexed pages. If not 100% sure about how to do that, read this post Rand wrote a while ago. Indexed pages in Google Scrapping the top 500 or top 1000 indexed pages in Google for the legacy site may seem like an odd task but it does have its benefits. Using Scrapebox or the scraper extension for Chrome perform a Google search for site:www.yoursite.com and scrape the top indexed URLs. This step may seem odd but it can identify: 404 pages that are still indexed by Google URLs that weren’t harvested in the previous steps Again, save all these URLs in another spreadsheet. 2.3 Export 404 pages Site migrations are great opportunities to tide things up and do some good housekeeping work. Especially with big sites, there is enormous potential to put things in order again; otherwise hundreds or even thousands of 404 pages will be reported again once the new site goes live. Some of those 404 pages may have quality links pointing to them. These can be exported directly from Webmaster Tools under Diagnostics-> Crawl Errors. Simply download the entire table as a CSV file. OSE also reports 404 pages, so exporting them may also be worthwhile. Using the SEO Moz Free API with Excel , we can figure out which of those 404 pages are worth redirecting based on metrics such as high PA, DA, mozRank and number of external links/root domains. Figuring out where to redirect each of these 404 pages can be tricky, as ideally each URL should be redirected to the most relevant page. Sometimes, this is can be "guessed" by looking for keywords in the URL. In cases that it is not possible, it is worth sending an email to the development team or the web master of the site, as they may be able to assist further. 2.4 Measure site performance This step is necessary when there is an environment or platform change. It is often the case, that a new CMS although does a great job in terms of managing the site’s content, it does affect site performance in a negative way. Therefore, it is crucial to make some measurements before the legacy site gets switched off. If site performance deteriorates, crawling may get affected which could then affect indexation. With some evidence in place, it will be much easier building up a case later, if necessary. Although there are several tools, Pingdom seems to be a reliable one. The most interesting stuff appears on the summary info box as well as on the Page Analysis Tab. Exporting the data, or even just getting a screenshot of the page could be valuable later. It would be worth running a performance test on some of the most typical pages e.g. a category page, a product page as well as the homepage. Pingdom Tools Summary Keep a record of typical loading times as well as the page size. If loading times increase whilst the size of the page remains is the same, something must have gone wrong. Pingdom Page Analysis Tab Running a Web Page Test would also be wise so site performance data are cross-referenced across two services just to make sure the results are consistent. The same exercises should be repeated once the new site is on the test server as well as when it finally goes live. Any serious performance issues need to be reported back to the client so they get resolved. 2.5 Measure rankings This step should ideally take place just before the new site goes live. Saving a detailed rankings report, which contains as many keywords as possible, is very important so it can be used as a benchmark for later comparisons. Apart from current positions it would be wise to keep a record of the ranking URLs too. Measuring rankings can be tricky though, and a reliable method needs to be followed. Chrome's Google Global extension and SEO SERP are two handy extensions for checking a few core keywords. With the former, you can see how rankings appear in different countries and cities, whilst the latter is quicker and does keep historical records. For a large number of keywords, proprietary or paid automated services should be used in order to save time. Some of the most popular commercial rank checkers include Advanced Web Ranking , Web CEO and SEO Powersuite to name a few. With Google Global extension for Chrome you can monitor how results appear in different countries, regions and cities. Phase 3: URL Redirect Mapping During this phase, pages (URLs) of the legacy site need to be mapped to pages (URLs) on the new site. For those pages where the URL remains the same there is nothing to worry about, provided that the amount of content on the new page hasn’t been significantly changed or reduced. This activity requires a great deal of attention, otherwise things can go terribly wrong. Depending on the size of the site, the URL mapping process can be done manually, which can be very time consuming, or automation can often be introduced to speed things up. However, saving up on time should not affect the quality of the work. Even though there isn't any magic recipe, the main principle is that ALL unique, useful or authoritative pages (URLs) of the legacy site should redirect to pages with the same or very relevant content on the new site, using 301 redirects. Always make sure that redirects are implemented using 301 redirects (permanent ) that pass most link equity from the old to the new page (site). The use of 302 (temporary) redirects IS NOT recommended because search engines treat them inconsistently and in most cases do not pass link equity, often resulting in drastic ranking drops . It’s worth stressing that pages with high traffic need extra attention but the bottom line is that every URL matters . By redirecting only a percentage of the URLs of the legacy site you may jeopardise the new domain’s authority as a whole, because it may appear to search engines as a weaker domain in terms of link equity. URL Mapping Process (Step-by-step) Drop all legacy URLs, which were identified and saved in the CSV files earlier (during phase 2), into a new spreadsheet (let's call it SpreadSheet1). Remove all duplicate URLs using Excel. Populate the page titles using the SEO for excel tool. Using SEO for Excel, check the server response headers. All 404 pages should be kept into a different tab so all remaining URLs are those with a 200 server response. In a new Excel spreadsheet (let's call it SpreadSheet2) drop all URLs of the new site (using a crawler application). Pull in the page titles for all these URLs as in step 3. Using the VLOOKUP Excel function, match URLs between the two spreadsheets Matched URLs (if any) should be removed from SpreadSheet1 as they already exist on the new site and do not need to be redirected. The 404 pages which were moved into a separate worksheet in step 4, need to be evaluated for potential link juice. There are several ways to make this assessment but the most reliable ones are: SEO Moz API (e.g. using the handy Excel extension SEO Moz Free API ) Majestic SEO API Depending on how many “juicy” URLs were identified in the previous step, a reasonable part of them needs to be added into Spreadsheet1. Ideally, all remaining URLs in SpreadSheet1 need to be 301 redirected. A new column (e.g. Destination URLs) needs to be added in SpreadSheet 1 and populated with URLs from the new site. Depending on the number of URLs to be mapped this can be done: Manually – By looking at the content of the old URL, the equivalent page on the new site needs to be found so the URL gets added in the Destination URLs column. If no identical page can be found, just chose the most relevant one (e.g. similar product page, parent page etc.) If the page has no content pay attention to its page title (if known or still cached by Google) or/and URL for keywords which should give you a clue about its previous content. Then, try to find a relevant page on the new site; that would be the mapping URL. If there is no content, no keywords in the URL and no descriptive page title, try to find out from the site owners what those URLs used to be about. Automatically - By writing a script that maps URLs based on page titles, meta description or URL patterns matching. Search for duplicate entries again in the ‘old URLs’ row and remove the entire row. Where patterns can be identified, pattern matching rules using regular expressions are always more preferable because that would reduce the web server's load. Ending up with thousands one-to-one redirects is not ideal and should be avoided, especially if there is a better solution. Phase 4: New Site On Test Server Because human errors do occur, testing that everything has gone as planned is extremely important. Unfortunately, because the migration responsibility falls mainly on the shoulders of the SEO, several checks need to be carried out. 4.1 Block crawler access The first and foremost thing to do is to make sure that the test environment is not accessible to any search engine crawler. There are several ways to achieve that but some are better than others. Block access in robots.txt (not recommended) This is not recommended because Google would still crawl the site and possibly index the URLs (but not the content). This implementation also runs the risk of going live if all files on the test server are going to be mirrored on the live one. The following two lines of code will restrict search engines access to the website: User-Agent: * Disallow: / Add a meta robots noindex to all pages (not recommended) This is recommended by Google as a way to entirely prevent a page's contents from being indexed. ... The main reason this is not recommended is because it runs the risk to be pushed to the live environment and remove all pages out of the search engines' index. Unfortunately, web developers' focus is on other things when a new site goes live and by the time you notice such a mistake, it may be a bit late. In many cases, removing the noindex after the site has gone live can take several days, or even weeks depending on how quickly technical issues are being resolved within an organisation. Usually, the bigger the business, the longer it takes as several people would be involved. Password-protect the test environment (recommended) This is a very efficient solution but it may cause some issues. Trying to crawl a password protected website is a challenge and not many crawler applications have the ability to achieve this. Xenu Links Sleuth can crawl password-protected sites. Allow access to certain IP addresses (recommended) This way, the web server allows access to specific external IP addresses e.g. that of the SEO agency. Access to search engine crawlers is restricted and there are no indexation risks. 4.2 Prepare a Robots.txt file That could be a fairly basic one, allowing access to all crawlers and indicating the path to the XML sitemap such as: User-agent: * Allow: / Sitemap: http://www.yoursite.com/sitemap.xml However, certain parts of the site could be excluded, particularly if the legacy site has duplicate content issues. For instance, internal search, pagination, or faceted navigation are often generating multiple URLs with the same content. This is a great opportunity to deal with legacy issues, so search engine crawling of the website can become more efficient. Saving up on crawl bandwidth will allow search engine to crawl only those URLs which are worthy of being indexed. That means that deep pages would stand a better chance to be found and rank quicker. 4.3 Prepare XML sitemap(s) Using your favourite tool, generate an XML sitemap, ideally containing HTML pages only. Xenu again does a great job because it easily generate XML sitemaps containing only HTML pages. For large web sites, generating multiple XML sitemaps for the different parts of the site would be a much better option so indexation issues could be easier identified later. The XML sitemap(s) should then be tested again for broken links before the site goes live. Source: blogstorm.co.uk Google Webmaster Tools allow users to test XML sitemaps before they get submitted. This is something worth doing in order to identify errors. 4.4 Prepare HTML sitemap Even though the XML sitemap alone should be enough to let search engines know about the URLs on the new site, implementing an HTML sitemap could help search engine spiders make a deep crawl of the site. The sooner the new URLs get crawled, the better. Again, check the HTML sitemap for broken links using Check My Links (Chrome) or Simple Links Counter (Firefox). 4.5 Fix broken links Run the crawler application again as more internal/external broken links, (never trust a) 302 redirects, or other issues may get detected. 4.6 Check 301 redirects This is the most important step of this phase and it may need to be repeated more than once. All URLs to be redirected should be checked. If you do not have direct access to the server one way to check the 301 redirects is by using Xenu's Check URL List feature. Alternatively, Screaming Frog's list view can be used in a similar manner. These applications will report whether 301s are in place or not, but not if the destination URL is the correct one. That could only be done in Excel using the VLOOKUP function . 4.7 Optimise redirects If time allows, the list of redirects needs to be optimised for optimal performance. Because the redirects are loaded into the web server's memory when the server starts, a high number of redirects can have a negative impact on performance. Similarly, each time a page request is being made, the web server will compare that against the redirects list. Thus, the shorter the list, the quicker the web server will respond. Even though such performance issues can be compensated by increasing the web server's resources, it is always best practice to work out pattern matching rules using regular expressions, which can cover hundreds or even thousands of possible requests. 4.8 Resolve duplicate content issues Duplicate content issues should be identified and resolved as early as possible. A few common cases of duplicate content may occur, regardless of what was happening previously on the legacy web site. URL normalisation at this stage will allow for optimal site crawling, as search engines will come across as many unique pages as possible. Such cases include: Directories with and without a trailing slash (e.g. this URL should redirect to that ). Default directory indexes (e.g. this URL should redirect to that ). Case in URLs. (e.g. this URL should redirect to that , or just return the 404 error page like this as opposed to that , which is the canonical one). Different protocols. The most typical example is when a website is accessible via http and https. (e.g. this URL should redirect to that ). However, this type of redirect needs attention as some URLs may need to exist only on https. Added Feb 26 Accessible IP addresses. Being able to access a website by requesting its IP address can cause duplicate content issues. (e.g. this URL should redirect to that ). Added Feb 26 URLs on different host domains e.g. www.examplesite.com and examplesite.com (e.g. this URL should redirect to that ). Internal search generating duplicate pages under different URLs. URLs with added parameters after the ? character. In all the above examples, poor URL normalisation results in duplicate pages that will have a negative impact on: Crawl bandwidth (search engine crawlers will be crawling redundant pages). Indexation (as search engines try to remove duplicate pages from their indexes). Link equity (as it will be diluted amongst the duplicate pages). 4.9 Site & Robots.txt monitoring Make sure the URL of the new site is monitored using a service like Uptime Robot . Each time the site is down for whatever reason, Uptime Robot will be notified by email, Twitter DM, or even SMS. Another useful service to set up a robots.txt monitoring service such as Robotto . Each time the robots.txt file gets updated you get notified, which is really handy. Uptime Robot logs all server up/down time events Phase 5: New Site Goes Live Finally the new site has gone live. Depending on the authority, link equity and size of the site Google should start crawling the site fairly quickly. However, do not expect the SERPs to be updated instantly. The new pages and URLs will be updated in the SERPs over a period of time, which typically can take from two to four weeks. For pages that seem to take ages to get indexed it may be worth using a ping service like Pingler . 5.1 Notify Google via Webmaster Tools If the domain name changes, you need to notify Google via the Webmaster Tools account of the old site, as soon as the new site goes live . In order to do that, the new domain needs to be added and verified . If the domain name remains the same, Google will find its way to the new URLs sooner or later. That mainly depends on the domain authority of the site and how frequently Google visits it. It would also be a very good idea to upload the XML sitemap via Webmaster Tools so the indexation process can be monitored (see phase 6). 5.2 Manual checks No matter how well everything appeared on the test server, several checks need to be carried out and running the crawler application again is the first thing to do. Pay attention for: Anomalies in the robots.txt file Meta robots noindex tags in the section of the HTML source code Meta robots nofollow tags in the source code 302 redirects. 301 redirects should be used instead as 302s are treated inconsistently by search engines and do not pass link equity Check Webmaster Tools for errors messages Check XML sitemap for errors (e.g. broken links, internal 301s) Check HTML sitemap for similar errors (e.g. using Simple Links Counter or Check My Links ) Missing or not properly migrated page titles Missing or not properly migrated meta descriptions Make sure that the 404 page returns a 404 server response Make sure the analytics tracking code is present on all pages and is tracking correctly Measure new site performance and compare it with that of the previous site Using Httpfox, a 302 redirect has been detected 5.3 Monitor crawl errors Google Webmaster tools, Bing Webmaster Tools and Yandex Webmaster all report crawl errors and is certainly worth checking often during the first days or even weeks. Pay attention to reported errors and dates and always try figure out what has been caused by the new site or the legacy one. 5.4 Update most valuable inbound links From the CSV files created in step 3.2, figure out which are the most valuable inbound links (using Majestic or OSE data) and then try to contact the web masters of those sites, requesting a URL update. Direct links pass more value than 301 redirects and this time-consuming task will eventually pay back. On the new site, check the inbound links and top pages tabs of OSE and try to identify new opportunities such as: Links from high authority sites which are being redirected. High authority 404 pages which should be redirected so the link juice flows to the site. In the following example, followed and 301 external links have been downloaded in a CSV file. Pay attention to the '301' columns for cells with the Yes value. Trying to update as many of these URLs as possible so the point directly to the site would pass more link equity to the site: Identify the most authoritative links and contact website owners to update them so they point to the new URL 5.5 Build fresh links Generating new, fresh links to the homepage, category and sub-category pages is a good idea because: With 301 redirects some link juice may get lost, thus new links can compensate for that. They can act as extra paths for search engine spiders to crawl the site. 5.6 Eliminate internal 301 redirects Although Web masters are quite keen on implementing 301 redirects, they often do not show the same interest updating the onsite URLs so internal redirects do not occur. Depending on the volume and frequency of internal 301 redirects, some link juice may evaporate, whilst the redirects will unnecessarily add an extra load to the web server. Again, in order to detect internal 301 redirects, crawling the site would be handy. Phase 6: Measure Impact/Success Once the new site gas finally gone live, the impact of all the previous hard work needs to be monitored. It may be a good idea monitoring rankings and indexation on a weekly basis but in general no conclusions should be made earlier than 3-4 weeks . No matter how good or bad rankings and traffic appear to be, you need to be patient. A deep crawl can take time, depending on the site's size, architecture and internal linking. Things to be looking at: Indexation . Submitted and indexed number of URLs reported by Webmaster Tools (see below) Rankings . They usually fluxuate for 1-3 weeks and initially they may drop. Eventually, they should recover around the same positions they were previously (or just about). Open site explorer metrics . Although they do not get updated daily, it is worth keeping an eye on reported figures for Domain Authority, Page Authority and MozRank on a monthly basis. Ideally, the figures should be as close as possible to those of the old site within a couple of months. If not, that is not a very good indication and you may have lost some link equity along the way. Google cache. Check the timestamps of cached pages for different page types e.g. homepage, category pages, product pages. Site performance in Webmaster Tools. This one may take a few weeks until it gets updated but it is very useful to know how Google perceives site performance before and after the migration. Any spikes that stand out need should alarm the web master and several suggestions can be made e.g. using Yslow and Page Speed in Firefox or Page Speed and Speed Tracer in Chrome. Check site performance in Webmaster Tools for unusual post migration anomalies Indexation of web pages, images and videos can be monitored in Google Webmaster Tools Appendix: Site Migration & SEO Useful Tools Some of the following tools would be very handy during the migration process, for different reasons. Crawler applications Xenu Link Sleuth (free) Analog X Link Examiner (free) Screaming Frog (paid) Integrity (For MAC - free) Scraper applications Scraper Extension for Chrome Scrapebox (paid) Link Intelligence software Open Site Explorer (free & paid) Majestic SEO (free & paid) HTTP Analysers HTTP Fox (Firefox) Live HTTP Headers (Firefox) IP checkers Show IP (Firefox) WorldIP (Firefox) Website IP (Chrome) Link checkers Simple Links Counter (Firefox) Check My Links (Chrome) Monitoring tools Uptime Robot (monitors domains for downtime) Robotto (monitors robots.txt) Rank checkers Google Global (Chrome) SEO SERP (Chrome) SEO Book Rank Checker (Firefox) Site performance analysis Yslow (Firefox) Page Speed (for Firefox) Page Speed (for Chrome) | Speed Tracer (Chrome) About the author Modesto Siotos ( @macmodi ) works as a Senior Natural Search Analyst for iCrossing UK, where he focuses on technical SEO issues, link tactics and content strategy. His move from web development into SEO was a trip with no return, and he is grateful to have worked with some SEO legends. Modesto is happy to share his experiences with others and writes regularly for a digital marketing blog .This is his first post for SEOmoz. Sign up for The Moz Top 10 , a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read! Read more »

11 Google Analytics Tricks to Use for Your Website

Posted by Eugen Oprea This post was originally in YouMoz , and was promoted to the main blog because it provides great value and interest to our community. The author's views are entirely his or her own and may not reflect the views of SEOmoz, Inc. Do you know what is the most common question that I get every day on social media, forums or email? "How to get insights about my Google Analytics data?" People approach me saying that they have a Google Analytics account for years, but they look only at page views or the number of visitors they get. And this is wrong, this is so wrong when they have powerful free Web Analytics tools that they can leverage to learn more about their visitors and use those insights to better serve their visitors. That is why in this article I am going to tell you some Google Analytics tricks that you should use for your website. You can get the basics from my Google Analytics course , but right now I am going to take this one step further to help you get even more insights from Google Analytics. Now, if you don't use the latest version of Google Analytics, login into your account and click the [New Version] link from the top right corner of your screen before we get started. This way I can be sure that you use the latest Google Analytics interface and you can follow this article along. 1. Setup Goals Something that it's quite a straight forward process, it's actually neglected by the majority of people and this is the fact that after you install the tracking code on your website you need to setup goals. The goals you setup for your website are the foundation of your website analysis because everything gravitates around your goals and conversion rates, the goals that are ultimately your business goals. If you are wondering what goals you need to setup, start by asking yourself what is the purpose of your website. Is it an eCommerce site and you want to sells tangible goods, is it a blog where you want to make revenue from ads, do you sell eBooks or services? What is the main purpose of your site? Then, once you figure this out you can go and start setting up goals base on your business objectives. If this is still unclear for you, here are some examples that will give you traction: eCommerce site - enable eCommerce tracking and start checking the conversion rates for your products Engaged Visitors - people who spend more than one minute on your site Readers - people who visit at least two pages on your site Calls to action - use event tracking (see below in the article) to measure calls to action Best performing ads - again, use event tracking to measure your best performing ads Subscriptions - check how the visitors who subscribe to your list behave Purchases - if you sell eBooks or courses you can get insights about your buyers Later, these goals will help you track conversion rates and get insights about what are the main traffic sources that send you visitors which convert, what are the keywords who send you customers, which page your visitor use most to signup for your newsletter, where are your customers from and examples can continue. Use these examples to get started, but please note that every website is unique and it will have unique goals. 2. Connect your Google Webmaster Tools account Google Webmaster Tools is another free product from Google which helps you see data about your website such as the number of impressions for your search queries and their position in Google, the number of links to your site or diagnosis information reported by Google after crawling your website. Additionally, you can check +1 metrics, your site performance or submit a sitemap for Google to index. But what the really interesting thing is the fact that you can connect your Google Webmaster Tools account with your Google Analytics account and get access to the new Search Engine Optimization reports. Once you do that, you will be able to see three new reports in your Google Analytics account: Queries, Landing Pages and Geographical Summary. They will help you learn more about your top performing search queries (keywords) and landing pages. Then, you can use that data to identify: Keywords with a low click through rate, but a good average position. Once you know them, you can change the meta title and description of your page to improve their click through rate. Landing pages with a good click through rate, but a low average position. These pages can be easily run through an on-page optimization process that will improve their rankings. What are the countries of your organic visitors and who your target market is. To connect your site from Google Webmaster Tools in Google Analytics, go to the [Traffic Sources] section, select [Search Engine Optimization] and then one of the three reports. At this stage you will see a page with the benefits of linking your accounts and a button where it says [Set up Webmaster Tools data sharing]. Click that button and then click [Edit] from the [Webmaster Tools Settings]. Then, you will be redirected to your Google Webmaster Tools where you can connect it with Google Analytics. 3. Enable Site Speed Site speed is also a neat feature of Google Analytics that lets you see the load time of your pages. This will help you check what pages need your attention and determine you to look for ways of speeding up the load time of your pages. If you wonder why this is important, I can tell you that the load speed of your pages can significantly improve your visitors experience on your site and it's also a ranking factor in Google . So a good load speed can make your visitors happy and can also increase your rankings. Along with the number of Page Views and Bounce Rate, you can see the Average Page Load Time (in seconds) and the number of visits that have been used as a sample for every page on your website. Additionally, if you click on the [Performance] tab, you can check different buckets of your page load time and see what is the average load speed of your pages. The [Map Overlay] will show you what is the load speed for different countries or territories. If before you needed to add an additional code to your Google Analytics tracking, now that is no longer required and Google Analytics will automatically add data to your reports. 4. Enable Site Search It's a fact that visitors who use the search box on your site are more likely to convert than the ones who don't. The reason why this happens is because they are more engaged with your website, with your content or your products and services. The beautiful thing about site search is that it lets you discover the exact keywords that people use to search for your products, so you can take this a step further and use them in your search engine optimization campaigns. You can actually use the most important keywords that people use to search on your site to optimize your pages and drive more targeted traffic to your website. Additionally, they might look for products or services that you do not have on your offer, but you can add them with little effort and increase your sales. Or if you have a blog, site search is a great way to see what your readers are looking for and get a ton of article ideas out of them. If you would like to enable site search on your website, first make sure that you have a search form on your site and then enable Site Search in Google Analytics. 5. Track Events Event tracking is a powerful feature in Google Analytics that can help you track among others: How many people download your eBook What ads are performing better and who clicks on your ads Which signup form converts better (sidebar, below the post, about page) Who pauses, fast forward or stops a video What errors a visitor encounters during the checkout But that is not all. Using the latest version of Google Analytics, you are also able to set these events as goals which can help you see the performance of your events based on different metrics. Enabling event tracking it's not a hard process. All you have to do is just add the code below next to your URL, before you replace the default values. onclick="_gaq.push(['_trackEvent', 'category', 'action', 'opt_label', 'opt_value']);" These default values will help you identify your events and here's what they represent: Category – You can use this element to identify what you want to track: eBook, video, signup form, ads. Action – This element can be used to define the interaction of your visitor and can be: click, button, play, stop. Personally, I use it to specify the place of my button/signup form/ad. Label – Use this to identify the type of event that is tracked. Value – This element helps you specify a value for you event that can be used when you setup a goal for your event. If you would like to see a working example, here's what I used to track a link to my new product, where "Ads" is the category of my link, "Sidebar" the place where I added the link and "WAB" the label. Then once you setup your links, all you have to do is just setup that event as a goal, using the Category, Action, Label, and Value conditions you have setup for your event. 6. Real-Time Reporting Google has taken analytics one step further recently and introduced Real-Time Reporting, which displays information about visitors that are on your website in a specific moment. Your are able to see how many visitors are on your website in that moment, where they are on your website, from where they come (keywords and referrals) and where they live. Additionally, you have access to another 3 reports with more insights about their location, how they arrived on your website and what pages they visit. To access the real-time reports you need to go to the [Home] menu > [REAL-TIME (BETA)]. The [Locations] report will provide you information about the number of your visitors and the countries where they are located. You can also check their location on a map. [Traffic Sources] will display information about where they come from. You will see the medium and source along with the total number of your visitors. The [Content] report will show you what are the active pages that your visitors read and how many active visitors are on each of the pages displayed on your report. 7. Multi-Channel Funnels With Multi-Channel Funnels Google Analytics provides even more value for users who are passionate about conversion rates. If before you were able to track the last source that the visitor used to convert, with Multi-Channel Funnels you are able to also track other sources (ads, referrals, social media, organic) that the visitor used to reach your website from. Let's say for example that your visitor (Cindy) landed for the first time on your website from Twitter and subscribed to your RSS feed. Next time, Cindy used the feed reader to come and read your new articles. Ultimately she was looking for advice on blogging and found your eBook using a search engine. Now, because she knows your site already, she will buy it and become a customer. Using this example, in the old version of Google Analytics the search engine was used to be credited for the conversion, but now, with Multi-Channel Funnels you can see the whole path that Cindy took to convert: Social Network > Referral > Search engine. To check the Multi-Channel Funnels reports, go to the [Conversions] section. Watch this video to learn more about Multi-Channel Funnels: 8. Use Campaign Tracking Tracking online marketing campaigns will help you get past that large number of direct visits that come from URL shorteners like bit.ly or clients like tweetdeck. Additionally, it will help you track more accurately links from other websites and links that you use to promote your content or campaigns. In order to use Campaign tracking in Google Analytics, you need to tag your URLs with special parameters. Those parameters can be added to your links using the URL Builder tool from Google. Once you tag your URLs with the mandatory parameters, use them as they are or use an URL shortener when sharing them. Then, check the [Campaigns] report, under [Traffic Sources] > [Sources] to get insights about your online marketing campaigns. To see step by step instructions and how to check Google Analytics Campaign Tracking reports, read more in this article. 9. Plot Rows Plot Rows allows you to create instant segments of your data in tabular reports. If you usually look at standard reports, you can use Plot Rows to get more insights from your metrics. To use this feature, you need to select two rows from any tabular report and then click the [Plot Rows] button from the bottom of the table. Once you do that, you will see that the chart has changed and you are able to see additional information there about the items that you have selected. In other words it instantly creates a segment with two of your items compared with the total metrics. Use this feature to check how your main keywords, referrals or pages compare with each other and with the overall metrics of the site. But make sure that you select items that do not have a big difference between their metrics (i.e. compare a keyword with 2340 visits with one that has 154). 10. Custom Dashboards In the old version of Google Analytics you used to have available only one dashboard. However, right now you can create up to 20 dashboards customized to your needs. To create a custom dashboard, go to the [Home] menu > [Dashboards] and select [+New Dashboard]. Once you do that, you will need to choose whether you will want to start from scratch with a blank canvas or get some pointers with the [Starter Dashboard]. Then you can use slick widgets to create custom metrics, pie charts, timelines or tables. To get started with custom dashboards, have a look at my screenshot above and try to duplicate it or check out 5 Insightful Google Analytics Dashboards . Then, you will be able to customize it and add the metrics that are relevant to your business. 11. Flow Visualization Flow Visualization definitely deserves a separate article to present it, but in the meantime I will outline it's benefits. Google Analytics rolled out two reports, [Visitors Flow], under the Audience section and [Goal Flow], under the Conversion section. Visitors Flow The Visitors Flow will display the path that your visitors have taken to navigate through your website. You will be able to see, based on a selected dimension, such as country source or keyword, the exact path of your visitors and where they stopped to read your content. On hover, the report displays for each page additional details, like the total number of visits, how many visitors moved to a different page and how many of them dropped the funnel and left. If you click on a page, you will be able to highlight the traffic that went through that page, explore traffic through that page or display in a popup even more details. Goal Flow The Goal Flow report is essentially a better representation of the Funnel Visualization report and contains the same dimensions as the Visitors Flow report. But the main difference between this and the Visitors Flow is the fact that the Goal Flow report doesn't uses all pages, but the steps you configured in the conversion funnel. Additionally, you can also use advanced segments to filter your data and get additional insights from the Visitors Flow and Goal Flow reports. Your turn In this article I presented 11 tips that you should use for your website and ultimately some of my favorite features in Google Analytics, but now it's your turn to do the same. What do you like most in Google Analytics and what features/tricks you think that everyone should know about? Let me know your thoughts in the comments section below. Sign up for The Moz Top 10 , a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read! Read more »

February Linkscape Update: 66 Billion URLs

Posted by randfish After some wrestling with Amazon's EC2 and the tragic loss of many hard disks therein, we've finally finished processing and have released the latest Linkscape update (previously scheduled for Feb. 14). This new index is, once again, quite large in comparison to our prior indices, and contains a mix of crawl data going back to the end of last year. In fact, this is technically our largest index ever! Here are the latest stats: 65,997,728,692 (66 billion) URLs 601,062,802 (601 million) Subdomains 140,281,592 (140 million) Root Domains 739,867,470,316 (740 billion) Links Followed vs. Nofollowed 2.21% of all links found were nofollowed 57.91% of nofollowed links are internal 42.09% are external Rel Canonical - 11.11% of all pages now employ a rel=canonical tag The average page in this index has 71.88 links on it 60.98 internal links on average 10.90 external links on average Read more »

Building a Technical SEO Process

Posted by Stephanie Chang One of the biggest challenges many of my clients face is building the right Read more »

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