Archive for November, 2008
Maine SEO Project: Reduce My College Costs
Wednesday, November 26th, 2008
Flyte recently launched a website for Reduce My College Costs, which I’m happy to say has finally been fully crawled and indexed! We worked with Marc Hill, a Certified College Planner, to both develop and optimize his site.
One of the most important things you can do, and I must pride Marc on this, is to do your SEO upfront. It’s been my experience that optimizing a site during development will be much easier and more cost effective than “SEO’ing” it later.
For example, we are now converting many of our table-based sites onto CSS platforms (namely, WordPress). While this particular problem is usually due to the age of a site; had SEO been performed at an earlier stage, it would have increased those sites’ search visibility earlier and saved them money (and who doesn’t want to save some dough these days?!).
Anyway - to get back on track, in this case, optimizing before launch should help Marc in the long run! Admittedly, I wish I had known how quickly mistakes can make a difference to the price you pay for school. If I’d only known people like Marc exist before I went to college!
So if you are in the midst of planning to send your child to college, start the process with RMCC’s free college savings tip sheet. Then, work with Marc in order to save on your son or daughter’s education expenses!
New from Google: SearchWiki and Search-based keyword tool
Tuesday, November 25th, 2008Lately, I’ve been writing a lot about Google - attempting to keep up with their never-ending additions to the search world. Most recently, they’ve launched SearchWiki (as a default setting to their SERP) and a new search-based keyword tool.
SearchWiki
Rich posted a great article yesterday on the flyte blog about SearchWiki. To summarize, if you’re logged into your Google account, you can literally change your results page - either by removing results entirely or pushing them to the first position(s). You can also write comments about a result, and see what other people have written.
Currently, SearchWiki does not affect search results; but with millions of people “voting” on websites, I think it’s only a matter of time before Google adds it to their algorithm. Only problem being…it is incredibly easy to spam.
Search-based keyword tool
This new tool is reminiscent of Google’s AdWords Keyword Tool. The comparison is not unlike the similarity between Google Trends and Google Insights. The data comes from generally the same place, with a few differences in presentation.
The new keyword tool uses your website or blog as a base to search for keywords, in addition to the ones you tell it to search for. Like the AdWords tool, you see the same categories, plus the suggested bid price for AdWords. You can save and export your keywords with both tools.
Here are the top ten keywords from Google’s new search-based keyword tool for this blog’s domain, along with the terms “seo” and “search engine optimization”:
You can see the differences in the top ten keywords between the two tools. The Adwords Keyword Tool pulls this data for the same search query:
All of these tools are great - and can be used in conjunction with one another in order to find the best keyword opportunities. But, good grief, what will Google come out with next?!?
Voice Search Added to Google’s iPhone Search App
Monday, November 24th, 2008The most recent edition of the Google Search App has a number of cool new changes, including automatically launching other Google apps. But the coolest addition, by far, is voice search. Here’s the official video on it:
The voice recognition is surprisingly accurate and much simpler than typing your search queries…go check it out!
Can Reviews Affect Your Local Search Rankings?
Wednesday, November 19th, 2008One of the best compliments a business can get is a referral. Word of mouth marketing has been an effective tool for ages, and why wouldn’t it be? Could even the most brilliant ad hope to compete with the sincerity of a referral from a friend?
Referrals are still as persuasive as ever, but now there is a more modern equivalent. Online customer reviews were the first big step. You see them everywhere - Amazon is especially famous for it - their “people who had your taste in books had this to say about this novel” reviews, plus the list of “oh by the way, they also liked these” books. Upselling? Maybe. But effective? Absolutely. Perfect strangers can affect the books you buy more than Amazon can themselves!
Now, Google is using reviews, and might even be taking them into account for rankings. Local Search results (Google Maps, in this case) include five-star ratings and reviews. My question is: what affect do reviews (whether good or bad) have on local rankings?
I think we can all agree that local rankings seem to be based on location, first and foremost. In other words, the closer to the address or city in the query a business is, the higher that business will rank. What if we factor in the small matter that a business (perhaps further away) has both more reviews and stars than the competition?
Case in point, a search for “lobster portland me”. Here are the first five search results. Notice only The Lobster Shack (#4) has reviews and stars, and is the only one on the first SERP with them.
It may not seem to prove anything at first. But take a look at the accompanying map.
Whether you’re from Portland (or Maine, for that matter) or not, you can see that Cape Elizabeth is not Portland. The entire first page, plus most of the second and third pages, are filled with Portland results; except for spot #4, which is also coincidentally the only company with customer reviews.
Maybe it is a coincidence. Then again maybe not. I’ve been noticing this trend for a while now, and while it is not a perfect science (sometimes un-reviewed sites rank much better than reviewed ones), it might be something.
The takeaway? Optimizing your site is important - it will help with rankings initially. But reviews (especially if you’re local) are critical. We often suggest our clients use a sort of new-age comment card system: by asking their customers to review their product or service on these local sites. Reviews might just be the icing on the cake, enough to give your company the edge!




