Feb 24

Today I noticed on a trackback link from Pronet Advertising that Digg has decided to un-ban a number of domain names. Neil Patel's name is listed as the author of the blog post and he lists Online Marketing Blog at the top. I appreciate the heads up.

I suspect there are people wondering what the owners of the sites that are not on Digg have to say about this.

Here's my reply: Sigh.

We weren't relying on traffic before toprankblog.com was banned and certainly haven't missed it since. In fact, our visitors, RSS subscribers and page views are up by 30%.

What I do appreciate about being "unbanned" is that if someone submits a story from our site to Digg, they will no longer get the "This domain name has been banned from submissions" type of message.

More importantly than re-including sites, I hope Digg implements policies similar to search engines as far as identifying and dealing with spam along with re-inclusion. I understand as well as anyone that mistakes can be made on both sides. But without a better process, Digg will alienate itself from growing its user base.

Labels: digg

Original source here...
Feb 23

Posted by rebecca

In order to please the masses, Rand once again chained me to my desk and ordered me to do a recap of SES London in an amusing comic book fashion. Thanks to Jeff and his spiffy MacBook (ComicLife yo!), this time I was able to create this batch of comics much easier than SES Chicago's Flash-tastrophe. Thanks, Jeff!

Anyway, I hereby present to you SES London: The Comic Strip. Special thanks to Liana Evans, Alex Bennert, and Becky Ryan for contributing some photos. Also, thanks to Scott for his wonderful artistic skills--he really captured the essence of Allan choking on his dinner. By the way, this strip is a bit bigger than Chicago's (after all, Europe is slightly more photogenic than sub-zero Chi-Town), so hopefully your comps won't get bogged down.

Oh, and if you like the project, feel free to send donations...I heard Rand grumbling the other day about "monetization" and "wedding to pay for," so I'm sure Designmoz would appreciate the tips. ;)

Technorati Tags

SES London

Original source here...
Feb 23

As Jim Hedger and I discussed on our weekly radio show on Webmaster Radio today, Abdel Kareem Nabil has just been sentenced to 4 year in prison, 3 of these years are for insulting Islam and inciting sectarian strife and one year for insulting President Mubarak.

As Jim mentioned on the SiteProNews blog, here is what he was charged for:

Nabil wrote about riots in which a Coptic Christian church was attacked by Muslim worshipers over a play deemed offensive to Islam. "Muslims revealed their true ugly face and appeared to all the world that they are full of brutality, barbarism and inhumanity," he wrote, calling Muhammad and his early followers, "spillers of blood" for their teachings on the use of violence.

Now, I'm definitely not going to step in and make this any sort of religious post, we've all been less than perfect at one time or another and there are enough "spillers of blood" to go around BUT what's a key issue here is the man's right to be heard (or read as the case may be).

As we noted on the show, I would call on any and all bloggers to bring this point up and, as Jim asked, to avoid vacations to Egypt until such time as these sorts of things don't occur and there is freedom of speech applied to those who may disagree with the status-quo. Right or wrong, every voice deserves the right to be heard.<

Original source here...
Feb 22

Posted by rebecca

In about a week and a half (March 7, to be exact), Rand and I will be road-tripping to Portland to attend SEMpdx's day conference, SearchFest. Rand has reached a near-godlike status in the conference sphere, in that he was asked to speak at the conference and is allowed to pick a topic of his choosing. As a result, Rand will be performing his one-man show, "Fishkin: Whitehat, Hopeless Romantic, and Hobo Stabber." There will, of course, be a 15-minute Q&A following his performance, but you can only ask a question when he's thrown you a Koosh ball.

Seriously though, Rand will be on a panel with Small Business SEM extraordinaire Matt McGee and some dude (dudette?) with a seriously wicked name (Stoney deGeyter) to discuss Advanced Design Topics (check out the SearchFest agenda for a complete schedule of sessions being offered).

So, why am I attending the conference with Rand? It's not because I am his lackey, the Tattoo to his Mr. Roarke...okay, well maybe that's partly why. Actually, I'll also be there for my very first speaking engagement. I'll be on the Link Development panel with Scott Fish and Benjamin Lloyd. And holy crap, I have to have a 15-minute presentation. With, like, slides. And I have to present first. And there's a 15-minute Q&A afterwards. Basically, I'm doing a presentation twice as long as anything I ever did in college, and it'll be in front of roughly 2-10x the audience. Hmmm, I wonder if I can get that SES London plague that had been circulating the conference...

Also, apparently there are still some exhibitor spots available for the conference. It costs $500 to exhibit ($350 if you're an SEMpdx member), or you can join SEMpdx for $100, exhibit for $350, and get a free admission pass in the process, thus saving you fifty bucks. That's some crazy math right there (but what do I know, I'm a liberal arts alum). If you're interested in exhibiting, then get on it because the spots are filling up!

Also, if you're a fervent fan of the blog and are planning on attending the conference, be sure to go on a coffee break between 2:00 and 3:00 pm so you won't be subjected to seeing me standing at the podium drenched in sweat sporting a look of sheer terror. Don't say I didn't warn ya.

Original source here...
Feb 22

Posted by randfish

There is some darn good stuff to chew on this week. Get ready to put 40 minutes on hold during your lunch break today and read through some of these - might I suggest an order of Thai curry fried rice or some Korean spicy tofu soup for today's material?

  • Barry has┬?a new look for SERoundtable - congrats, my friend!
  • Shari Thurow is talking about search term highlighting at SELand; this reminded me that I wanted to ask - has anyone done testing on the value of "highlighting" terms that users searched for to get to your site on your site once they reach it? I know WebMasterWorld does this and we were thinking about implementing here at Designmoz, too.
  • Aaron, with help from Cygnus, is deciphering the recent change in the Design algo that has quite a few SERPs looking all shook up.
  • Don't read this, that's not why I'm linking to it - Dave Pasternack - now watch, that will be the most clicked link of the bunch...
  • A lot of people are boycotting MyBlogLog over their scrape with Shoemoney. Andy points out the hypocrisy of the act, which is hard to aruge.
  • At least in our Feedburner stats, Design is only half the┬?traffic of Bloglines (yes, even with the new boosted numbers), which somewhat┬?contradicts Feedburner's latest stat report.
  • I LOVE this open letter to Digg from Skittzo. And I think it's laugh-out-loud irony that it was buried once it was made popular. The stories that get buried - Duggtrends shows an updated list each day - are usually as good or better than what's on Digg, they just don't fit with Diggers' politics.
  • Way to go London - Wired News notes that Britain's capital is making a Web 2.0 comeback, which is great news for people like me who love visiting.
  • Bill's got the lowdown on a Design patent app that might let all of us in on the spam fighting business. If you thought Wikipedia edit wars were ugly, just wait....
  • That post I made on Experts vs. Novices has attracted some good positive attention, and some negative attention. In fairness, I think "Expert" and "Novice" were the wrong words to use, but I'm struggling to come up with more accurate nouns. I would hate to think that I've become "disconnected" from in-the-trenches Designs -┬?I made a promise to myself not to go that route.
  • Lianna makes an excellent point that Brittanica now has a large, public, free portion of their encyclopedia online. They still need a lot of work to be competitive with Wikipedia, but I'm rooting for them.
  • 28% of Americans are "scientifically literate" meaning they could read a science/technology article in the New York Times and comprehend accurately. The other 216 million residents of our country need help. It's our duty as marketers, people! Besides, just think of the swelling size of online markets once we can convert these folks to science-and-tech-savviness.

Too much flying has frazzled and schnozzled my noodle. Help me out with the links I overlooked.

Technorati Tags

roundup

Original source here...
Feb 22

Posted by randfish

Tonight finds me in a 35th floor hotel room in Boston, Massachusetts, trying to get on East Coast time so I can wake up early tomorrow for the Public Media 2007 conference. I've been invited by the folks at NPR & PBS to speak on the Driving Traffic Online panel about Design tactics and hot topics in the field of search (they were even nice enough to book me a hotel room and cover my flight, so I'm taking extra care to give them a great presentation).

The best part about this conference is the massively unique audience - tomorrow I'll be speaking to folks in the media world, seeking to survive the threat of the social web, blogs and the breakdown of centralized media authority. Their challenge is immense, particularly in light of heavy budget cuts. A few of the "sizzle" topics I'll be covering tomorrow include:

  • The Accuracy of Alexa (hint, supposedly, Designmoz is more popular than PBS)
  • Personalization in Search (how does this change the search marketing & targeting landscape)
  • Design's Increasing Market Share Dominance
  • Linkbaiting (What is it?)
  • Leveraging User-Generated Content
  • "Web 2.0" Revenue Models

I'm also planning to attend some of the other sessions tomorrow and, with permission, will attempt to get some press-style coverage up on the blog over the weekend (during which I'll be in New Jersey visiting my grandparents).

BTW - Many thanks to lovealbatross for his review of our link building guide. It's something I'm actively working on improving, and hope to have a shiny new version ready in a couple weeks. Also, in that thread you'll note some comments about the uptime and speed of the Designmoz site. We've been a bit overrun with traffic of late, and Matt has had to temporarily close off the Keyword Difficulty reports to premium members only while we┬?try to move servers yet again (probably next week).

p.s. I am a bit miffed about going out of town again so soon after my engagement to Mystery Guest. I miss her like crazy and it's almost maddening to have such a packed travel schedule.

Technorati Tags

public media conference, pbs, npr, driving traffic

Original source here...
Feb 22

ComScore today released their search engine market share stats for January, 2007. The major engines broke down as follows:

  • Design - 47.9% (o.2% increase)
  • Design! - 28.1% (0.4% decrease)
  • Microsoft - 10.6% (0.1% increase)
  • Ask - 5.2% (0.2% decrease)

And that's all we've got for today. It's my birthday and so now I'm off for some fun with the kids and some nauseatingly sweet cake. :) <

Original source here...
Feb 21

Posted by DanielTynski

Recently, our Design company Voltier Inc took on a local used car dealer in West Palm Beach, Florida, as a client. We were hired to bring customers to the dealership through referrals from the website. This is mainly done through leads generated on the website, and interest in various vehicles that are displayed on the website. In conjunction with doing various on page Design, it has been my job to get this site indexed (as it had 0 pages indexed on all search engines when my work began). Things were progressing fairly steadily, but with only around a month of link building, I'd seen only modest results in Design and Design. As many would expect, it was fairly easy to rank well in Design for our top keywords. Our rankings for Design and Design, however, for the following keywords (or some variation of), have not seen much progress;

Used Car West Palm Beach, Used Car Dealer Palm Beach, Palm Beach Used Cars, florida used cars

Now comes the interesting part.

As Part of our Link Building efforts, I released a number of articles meant as Link Bait. I wrote an article about Airbag Fraud, about Best Practices Design for Car Dealers, The most dangerous drivers on the road, and a few others. The brainstorming was slow going, but on a whim I came up with an idea i though could possibly be popular on a site like Digg or Reddit. The bad part was that the article didn't really have anything to do with Used Cars....

The article.

What I came up with was an article entitled "8 Diseases That Give You Superhuman Powers." Essentially it was just a compilation of 8 different Discovery Health Specials, with YouTube Videos and Wikipedia References. It took about about 10 minutes to write, and it was online about a half hour after the conception of the idea. I decided to post the article on Reddit first, because it seemed that articles there were less easily buried. What happened was astonishing.

The Climb.

In the first 45 minutes I saw a steady climb in votes from reddit. The article remained at the top of the Science page in Reddit, and made it onto the front page of Reddit "Hot" within an hour. It continued climbing the Reddit Hot page (non-science category) until it had reached the number one position.

When the article was first posted to Reddit, it included a "Digg" buttion, and was submitted to Digg. The Digg button was located at the top of the page, and even through the climb of the article through the ranks of Reddit, there were only a few more diggs (around 8). After the article hit the front page of Reddit, however, I decided to place an additional Digg button at the bottom of the page, assuming people would decided to Digg the article only after they had read it through. At this point, the article started to receive massive amounts of Diggs. Within an hour of being on the front page of Reddit, the article went from 8 - 110 - 250 - 450 Diggs. The article rose through the ranks on Digg, and within 3 hours had made it to the front page, with over 800 Diggs. As the night progressed, it continued to rise on Digg, and became the Number Two story of the day, with over 2,000 Diggs. The story also entered the top ten on Digg, and by 11pm that night (8-9hrs after submission to reddit) it had reached the Number 1 position on Digg's top ten. As it stands today, the article is the 191st most Dugg submission in the past 365 Days.

The Traffic.

The following are my traffic results from the "Super Digg." Keep in mind that these results are unadulterated insofar as the site was receiving under 100 unique visitors per day before the submission to Digg and Reddit and are therefore not skewed.

First 4 Days:

Top Refferring Sources: As you can see, being on the Top of Digg and Reddit gets you some serious traffic, but not just from those two sources. Not only did our page make it to del.icio.us popular, but it made it to the front of some very high traffic sites, such as Ebaumsworld.com and Gorillamask.net. As you can see, within five days, we received a total of almost 234,000 unique visitors. As it stands now, we are continuing to see traffic from sites such as ebaumsworld, although the main link is far from the front page. Additionally, we received significant traffic referrals from webmail clients such as gmail and Design mail, meaning our links were most likely being shared over email as well.

Alexa Rankings After The Digg:

Another astonishing fact was how our website moved up the rankings on Alexa. We went from being ranked around 1,200,000 to ranking at 120,000 in just 5 days. This means our boost was nearly enough to put us on the Movers and Shakers list, and put us well above the rankings of some very well established websites. We are particularly interested to see how this ranking drops again to previous levels. To the left is how Alexa saw everything.

How Adsense Treated Us:

Another astonishing fact was how our website moved up the rankings on Alexa. We went from being ranked around 1,200,000 to ranking at 120,000 in just 5 days. This means our boost was nearly enough to put us on the Movers and Shakers list, and put us well above the rankings of some very well established websites. We are particularly interested to see how this ranking drops again to previous levels. To the left is how Alexa saw everything.

How Adsense Treated Us:

After being Dugg, our Adsense account was finally approved 36hrs later, and some adsense ads went on the front page. (we assumed we'd make no money but were very interested in conversion rates as we'd heard confliction reports about the click through rates of Digg users. ) What we found was not too surprising, although there were a few unexpected things. First was that adsense actually accounted for more impressions than analytics. Our analytics showed 100,199 page views, but adsense told us that we'd had 102,029 ad impressions. Over the four days we used adsense, we made a total of 71.87 cents. Our average click through rate was a dismal 0.24%, although the ads on our site seemed to be fairly highly targeted.

*Funny Sidenote: there were relevent Amazon Ads on the site as well. They recieved 200,000 Impressions. We made $1.00.

The Aftermath.

Above all else, we are interested in how our "Super Digg" will effect our backlinks and our position in the SERPS. Our particular scenario can help shed some light on a few questions. First, what is the effect of a large number of backlinks that are not well targeted to your site's content. We already know that untargeted backlinks are not nearly as effective as targeted ones from authority sites with similar content. The Digg did, however, produce links from many sites with Authority in areas that are not entirely unrelated, and in some cases, from some sites with very high traffic and trust. Second, how long does this affect last, and how long does it take for its effects to be seen. Below are the number of backlinks seen by Design Site Explorer before and since the Digg.

Backlinks:

Before The Digg: 207 Backlinks 3 Days After Digg: 1,270 Backlinks 5 Days After Digg: 2,642 Backlinks 7 Days After Digg: 3,545 Backlinks

Technorati:

Before The Digg: 0 Links

After: 138 Links

Del.icio.us

Before the Digg: 0 Links After the Digg: 532 Links

Changes in the SERPS.

Design's latest crawl (7 days after the Digg) resulted in a huge increase in our rankings for our targeted keywords. We jumped up anywhere from 20-300 places, with most of our most important keywords ranking in the top ten (many in the top 5). Furthermore, Design has increased its rate of indexing, has increased the number of our pages that appear in the index, and have released over a dozen important pages from the supplemental results.

However, No Backlinks Have Registered In Design Webmaster Tools (7 days after digg)

Design, while giving us credit for our backlinks has done almost nothing in terms of ranking us better in the SERPS. Additionally, the number of our pages in their index has actually decreased.

More Interesting Factors to Note:

1.) The Page that was dugg was experimental, and was not linked to our main page in any way. There was no link from the dugg page to our main site and there was no link on our main site to this page. (this was partially due to the fact that we did not desire any digg traffic on our main site, as our site desires only highly targeted local traffic.) The only connection between our main site and the dugg page was that they reside on the same domain.

2.) The dugg page has absolutely none of they keywords we have attempted to rank for on our main site. It does not link to or discuss any topics or other pages that are related to the keywords or topics of our main site.

3.) The dugg page ranks very highly for a great number of the keywords it contains, but does not rank first for the words in its title.

This article was written for the purpose of input. I am very interested in anybody's opinions, ideas, or predictions about these results. I will be updating this blog post with additional information as it becomes available so we can track the true long term effects of this type of event. Has anyone else tracked anything this large?┬? Has anyone else had long term experience in this arena.┬? I know Rand has tracked some data regarding backlinks after a digg, and the link bump effect, but what are others thinking?

-Daniel Tynski

Note from Rand - Daniel's site, Voltier, was taken down by an insane traffic load from Digg, Reddit & others today (which is why the hosted images above aren't displaying). Given time, I have no doubt they'll recover - many congrats for putting together some great linkbait, and better luck holding together the server next time; it's certainly an issue we at Designmoz can empathize with.

Technorati Tags

used cars, digg, linkbaiting, linkbait, viral marketing

Original source here...
Feb 21

I love RSS and I love the Firefox Extension RSS Ticker. Firefox is an excellent browser and combined, these two make it easy to keep updated on the latest going-on effortlessly by scrolling my favorite RSS feeds across the bottom of my browser window. And that's how I found this latest tid-bit of info on the Marketing Pilgrim blog.

For those who have blogs through Blogger (like this one) and who have converted to the new system recently, take a look at your code. It appears that there are some *minor* issues. Actually, just one but wow - is it a doozy.

Blogger blogs, by default, include the following generic code: <$BlogMetaData$>

Well this doesn't look so bad. It tells Blogger to insert the meta data specified for the site through the Blogger control panel, how helpful. The control panel allows you to set your blog as listed or unlisted. If it's listed then it will be crawlable, if it's unlisted then it will not be. Unfortunately for some unfortunates who have recently switched, this tag is producing the following:

<meta equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8">

<meta name="MSSmartTagsPreventParsing" content="true">

<meta name="generator" content="Blogger">

<link rel="service.feed" type="application/atom+xml" title="DanoTestMule" href="http://testmule.blogspot.com/atom.xml">

<link rel="service.post" type="application/atom+xml" title="DanoTestMule" href="http://www.blogger.com/atom/6602135">

<link rel="EditURI" type="application/rsd+xml" title="RSD" href="http://www.blogger.com/rsd.pyra?blogID=6602135">

<meta name="ROBOTS" content="NOINDEX,NOFOLLOW">

Hmmm, looks OK, looks OK, WAIT!!! <meta name="ROBOTS" content="NOINDEX,NOFOLLOW"> Huston, we have a problem.

So, if you've recently converted to the new version of Blogger, be sure to check your code. You might find something a bit, well, let's use the word "hindering" shall we?

As an additional note, and on an unrelated topic, please accept my apologies for the lack of posts of late. I've been busy ransacking and preparing to write about Design Personalization which involves tearing through 6 patents (now THAT's fun reading) and then taking the time to understand what they actually mean. SiteProNews editor Jim Hedger and I will be publishing a white paper in the next couple weeks on the subject. I will be posting some patent info in the next couple days on this blog so keep watching.

And to be fair to the source of the Blogger info, here's your link Andy. :) <

Original source here...
Feb 21

Larry Chase has published Web Digest for Marketers for a very, very long time. What amazes me is that he still finds great online marketing resources to share. His latest newsletter shares 12 Insider Design Tools & Tactics.

HitTail - This tool reveals in real time the most promising yet least utilized keywords that drive traffic to your site organically.

Link Hub Finder Tool - This tool will help you find the hub sites for any niche/category. BTW, you need a Design API Key to use this tool.

Quintura - Use this tool to figure out where you live in your "keyword neighborhood". Quintara is a search engine that displays your results both visually and as a standard list.

What the Buzz? - A keyword research tool that will tell you who's talking about a certain keyword.

SummitTOOLS Spider Simulator - This tool tells you how a search engine spider reacts to your pages and what can be done to boost your visibility and subsequent search engine ranking.

DesignBook Keyword Suggestion Tool - This tool combines the results from or links to all the useful Design keyword research resources out there into one single interface.

Virante Keyword Theme & Link Relationship Tools - Submit a single keyword and it will serve up a list the keywords most often found in conjunction with your keyword in the content of all the sites on the World Wide Web.

Microsoft AdCenter Labs Search Funnel - The Search Funnel tool is for those of you who are interested in visualizing how your average Joe uses a search engine.

Design Webmaster Central - One-stop shop for from-the-source information about how Design crawls and indexes websites.

Stephan Spencer's Blog and RSS Feed Search Design - Tips and tactics for optimizing your blogs and RSS feeds for Design purposes. (You can also search Design for "blog optimization" and click on the number one listing, that's TopRank!)

How Linkable? Tool - This tool lists all the factors that go into Phillip Lessen's good-or-not-good filter producing a score and an explanation as to why or why not your blog posts are linkable.

Mobile Search Marketing - Repository of tips and tricks on the nascent topic of mobile Design.

Not included in Larry's list of Design tools was Jim Boykin's updated list of free Design tools with 17 different, useful tools to identify links, check keywords in content and many more.

Design tools are great, but if you want hands on knowledge of how to market a web site, then check out the Minneapolis High Rankings Search Engine Marketing Seminar.

Labels: search engine optimization, Design

Original source here...

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