May 17

Posted by great scott!

This week Rand talks about...well...nothing, he's in China. Rebecca Kelley takes over for a sublimely light-hearted Whiteboard Friday in which the rest of the Moz crew show that we can most certainly bring the noise to match anyone's funk.

This installment is...umm...well, it's ridiculous folks.┬? We don't want you all thinking too hard all the time, so happy Friday, and forgive us our occasional (alright, frequent) moments of levity.┬? It's just started getting sunny here in Seattle (good for all of you SMX attendees) so we can't be held responsible for our actions. Blame it on an overload of Vitamin D.

Cheers!

Also available on YouTube.

Original source here...
May 17

Posted by rebecca

And now, to finish off your Thursday, here's a roundup of various news tidbits that I found interesting:

  • Scoreboard Media Group has an encouraging post called "If At First You Don't Succeed, Quit!" Though it's rife with baseball metaphors, Brian Provost makes a fantastic point--that sometimes the smartest thing to do is to quit a project. There's nothing worse than running a venture into the ground for months and refusing to acknowledge that maybe it wasn't meant to be.
  • Problogger wrote a little gem of a post titled "How Not to Become a Grumpy Old Blogger." It's easy to believe that people love to read about your rants and bitchings, but you run the risk of sounding like an unhappy, unlikeable one-trick pony. Thicken up that skin! My advice is to grow up with two older brothers who coined affectionate nicknames for you (like Turd) and pounced on every insecurity you made the mistake of exposing. It works wonders, and the requisite therapy as an adult is totally worth it (Hi Dr. Gladstein! I'm sharing my feelings!).
  • My mother land has been quite newsworthy lately. First Barry reports over at Search Engine Land that by September 1st, Koreans will be required to enter their name and resident registration number in order to view unfiltered "adult" search queries. What if you're a teenager in Korea and you want to look up information about safe sex? Will that get caught by the filter? I'm a bit worried about what Korea will determine to be "adult in nature."

    On a more positive note, test trains crossed between North and South Korea for the first time in 56 years. For some reason I have "Why Can't We Be Friends" stuck in my head now...

  • Ciaran pointed out on YOUmoz that journalist Alan Johnston (whose birthday is today) may have been kidnapped in Gaza, where he was reporting. The BBC is urging bloggers to add a badge to their site in order to spread awareness of his disappearance.
  • SMX Advanced in Seattle is only 17 days away, so buy your pass if you haven't already! Rand, of course, will be speaking on a social media marketing panel, Jane and I will provide extensive coverage of the conference, and Matt, Jeff, and Scott will be waiting in the wings to crash any event parties in the evenings.
  • Congratulations to the five finalists in Andy Beal's SEM Scholarship competition, Keri Morgret and Cavan Moon, who took the grand prize and the runner's up honors in Bruce Clay's Design Charity Contest, and Patrick Sexton, who won a free pass to SMX from Aaron Wall. Man, everyone's having contest nowadays. Designmoz should have one. How about whoever designs the most kick-ass Designmoz t-shirt gets to spend a day with our delightful programmers, Matt and Jeff, as they tell you why your design sucks and doesn't incorporate enough vectors and swirls.

If you can think of any other stories that you'd like to share, then feel free to do so in the comments. In the meantime, look forward to my crappy Whiteboard Friday video tomorrow, where I spend zero minutes talking about Design and a few minutes making fun of Rand

Original source here...
May 17

Posted by randfish

I noticed an engaging blog post from Stoney DeGeyter over at SearchEngineLand this evening (or rather, morning/afternoon for our American & European readers) - The Ranking Roller Coaster Cause & Effect. It's definitely worth a read, but I also wanted to point out one specific area that we see causing the "rollercoaster" effect all the time - temporal data.

Temporal data for a search engine can include:

  • When content was first spidered
  • When a new link was first discovered
  • Time frames for influxes of links
  • Time frames for large amounts of content on a specific subject

The engines can use this data in all sorts of ways (everything from knowing what to put in the "news" results to determining potential spammers), but it really affects the rollercoaster ups and downs of rankings, too. Stoney mentions three things that can cause the coaster:

  • Changes you make on your site
  • Changes to search engine algorithms
  • Changes made by your competitors

I'd add temporal fluctuations as a critical fourth. In a way, this falls under "changes to search engine algorithms," but the algos aren't really changing, they're just absorbing new data in the ways they always have. What we usually see is that Design and Design, and Design! to a slightly lesser extent, give priority to new documents on trusted sites and to even small clusters of inbound link influxes. Thus, the following scenarios happen quite a bit:

  • You're ranking great, when all of a sudden, a Flickr page or a Technorati tag page or a page at Wikipedia overtakes you. The page is new, has little to no external inbounds, and you're flumoxed by how it can rank well. Don't worry, amigo - that's almost certainly the fresh boost, and it tends to die out after 5-10 days at most.
  • You're ranking in 10th or 20th place behind some heavy hitters, but your domain is pretty tough and all of a sudden, 5-10 new links point your way. Voila! You're at the top of the results, ranking in front of pages you were sure you'd never overtake this quickly. Once again, it's fresh boost, giving a little bit of "extra credit" to your newfound popularity. I liken this to the search engines almost making the assumption that "whoa! this page got a lot of link love quickly, it must be super relevant/popular for this query, let's give it some juice." The problem is when the engines don't find lots more new links, you start falling down in the results fairly rapidly. Should we call that the "stale drop"?
  • Rollercoaster mania hits - you're trading places atop the SERPs with 2-3 pages almost every day. I almost want to call this the "tie" flux - new links, and possibly refreshed content on your page and your competitors is making it a really tough call for 1st place, so the tiniest of changes can bump you ahead or leave you behind.

All in all, I like Stoney's post, particularly for his last few lines of advice:

Almost every site owner will, at one time or another, find themselves face to face with significant ranking drops. Panicking should be the last thing that you do. Sometimes the best course of action is nothing, however you can never go wrong with a bit of research.

Many people, when seeing sudden drops in rankings, make drastic changes in their website in order to compensate. For the most part, this is a bad move. The first thing you need to do is to research the issue, identify what (as much as can be determined) caused the problem and then carefully plan out a course of action, if any, which needs to be taken.

However, make sure you're thinking carefully about temporal data the engines use and how it might be impacting your rankings/results.

Original source here...
May 17

I had the great pleasure of chatting with Senator Dorgan yesterday for a few minutes. The content of the interview will be aired tomorrow on my weekly Webmaster Radio radio show with co-host Jim Hedger. Mr. Dorgan introduced the 'Internet Freedom Preservation Act' into congress to help preserve net neutrality.

On the show tomorrow we will also be speaking with Craig Aaron from SaveTheInternet.com, a website and coalition dedicated to preserving net neutrality. It'll be a great show.

Now I'm going to admit my bias, I support net neutrality but with that I have to give fair time to each side so here we have clips of Senator Dorgan (supports net neutrality) and Senator Stevens (against). You be the judge:

Senator Dorgan speaking in support of net neutrality:

Senator Stevens speaking against net neutrality:

See ... I might be biased but I feel it's only fair to give time for each side to voice their opinions. ;) <

Original source here...