Posts Tagged ‘Google’

What’s Going On With Google Analytics Lately?

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

Strange GA Issue #1

Today, I recieved the following email from a client:

Hi Nicki,
When I look at the web site with IE8 built-in developer tools, it shows the error  ‘_gat’ is undefined  when viewing on the script tab.

After brainstorming with some of the developers here, we soon realized the problem was with Google Analytics.  The page, it seems, is loading too fast!  That seems to be the bulk of the issue, coupled with the fact that Internet Explorer 8 has been released.  It might be a good idea to start dropping IE 6 for good, with two other versions of IE available.

Strange GA Issue #2

Last week, I met with another client to do some Google Analytics training.  One of my favorite GA tools is the site overlay: which shows how people behave on your website.

Google Analytics site overlay

However, when showing the client just how cool site overlays are, GA decided against showing us the overlay.  All we could see was their website – no overlay.  Checking severall days later proved to bring up the overlay correctly.  I’ve seen this happen before with other sites – where GA is finnicky about what it shows.  What gives??

Nicki Hicks
GA Detective

Learning from SMX West (Without Actually Having to Be There): Day 2 #smxwest

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

Thanks to Barry Schwartz and Keri Morgret from Search Engine Roundtable for taking the time to live blog many of the SMX West sessions!  Here are a few of my notes from Wednesday, Day 2…

Google’s SearchWiki, Customized, and Personal Search

(Archived version from SE Roundtable)
(Personalized and Customized Search from SMX East)

  • For SearchWiki research, Google has actually gone into people’s homes to see what they’re searching for; not only on their computers but on notes around their computer!
  • How Google thinks SearchWiki will help people:
    - Bookmarking
    - Improve specific name searches
    - Collect information for a task
    - Look at the RIGHT sites
    - Refinding hard-to-find info
  • SearchWiki = explicit tool, Personalized Search = implicit tool (Google does work for user)
  • Personalized Search: privacy-sensitive, transparent, show searcher is on and has ability to turn OFF
  • Google Preferred Sites – add preferred sites with Google experiments (bases SERPS off of this)
  • What does this mean for SEOs?
    Bad news:
    - Hard to collect metrics
    - See how page ranks
    Good news:
    - Easier for people to find you
    - Easier to retain customers who prefer your business
    - Top position no longer means winner takes all!
  • From Google, how to deal with these new forms of search: “Make a good website.” (Ingenious.)
  • To control personalized search
    - Use search details
    - Disable by appending &pws=0 in URL
    - Log out of your Google account
    - Look for extensions
  • Google isn’t PRESENTLY using SearchWiki to change search results
  • Not a large percentage of search results are personalized – most are simply due to geographic location
  • Both SearchWiki and Personalized Search do NOT have a role with Ads
  • There is still an opportunity for newcomers to be found: simply by making your site valuable to users and it will come up
  • Get around localized results by changing location, specifying the location you’re looking for
  • Right now, SearchWiki is meant for personal use
  • Someone leaves a negative SearchWiki comment on your site? Give the comment a thumb’s down and/or flag as inappropriate – feedback is taken into consideration
  • As soon as a comment is flagged as inappropriate, it is removed until reviewed
  • Personalized results may even happen without your logging in (using IP address)

(more…)

One Stop Shop for Local Search: GetListed.org

Monday, January 26th, 2009

Last week, Search Engine Roundtable posted an article about GetListed.org, a site that is incredibly helpful for local businesses.  Get Listed truly is a one stop shop, as it pulls your local listings from Google Maps, Yahoo! Local, Best of the Web, and Live.

Here is flyte’s snapshot of listings:

To break things down a little further, Get Listed shows a “To Do” list for you website: showing on which sites your business is claimed, where you have photos, and even citations.

What a great tool for consolidating all of my local listings!

Nicki Hicks
Location, location, location

Google, Stick To What You’re Good At

Thursday, January 8th, 2009

Last year, Google released Chrome.  It was highly anticipated and, yes, has a lot of great features.  It’s also gotten a general “so-so” reaction.  But after four months, has anyone said “Wow. That really turned out to be the best browser!”?  Not so much.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m a huge advocate for Google.  This just makes me ask: Google, why not stick to what you’re good at?  Remember that little monopolistic situation you’ve got going on in Search?

Isn’t it a basic rule of good business and the inevitable death of so many in niche industries: don’t try to do a bunch of things mediocre, just do one thing really, really good? (Disclaimer: I’m in no way saying Google is mediocre.)

I still have two major issues:

  1. There is still no Mac version. (I may or may not be edging bitter with that one…)
  2. My FireFox extensions are still near and dear.

But don’t take my word for it.  Take a look at the numbers….

Graph from Wikipedia.

I think these numbers will speak more highly than my rant – just over 1% of people use Chrome.  But I have to wonder…what would browser usage look like had Chrome been released before Firefox 3?

Nicki Hicks
Who could resist a cute, cuddly fox for a mascot?

A New Year’s Gift: PageRank Update

Monday, January 5th, 2009

Happy 2009!  My how the year flies by!!

As a present for entering the New Year, the great Google guru Matt Cutts has confirmed it: Google’s Toolbar PageRank has officially been updated for the first time since September.

The Maine SEO blog has gone from a PR 2 to a PR 4!

Toolbar PageRank is basically inaccurate after a few days, as it’s updated only about every 3 months.  So if yours is up, enjoy and Happy New Year!

Nicki Hicks
What’s your New Year’s PR?

9 Reasons Why You Need Google’s Webmaster Tools

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008

I’m a huge advocate for measuring success and using geeky measurement tools to do it.  As a compliment to Google Analytics, there is Webmaster Tools.  While there is some overlap between the two, together, they give you a pretty good picture of how your site is doing.  And while some think Google knows too much about our websites (yes, they see same data as you do), the trade off is that it’s free.

  1. Installation is easy. Choose to either plop a meta-tag into your code or upload an HTML file.
  2. Quickly check for web crawl errors. Have any 404 errors?  Any nofollows or robots.txt you didn’t know about?
  3. Can your site be accessed via smart phone? No need to check manually…Webmaster Tools will tell you!
  4. Specific help for SEO. In the Diagnostics > Content Analysis section, check out any meta-description, title tag, or non-indexable content issues your site may have.
  5. Top Search Queries. More of a fun fact than anything.  What top 20 keywords do you rank for?  What percentage of people that search for that term click on your site?  More importantly, ask yourself…are these the terms you optimized your site for?
  6. “What Googlebot sees.” Very powerful information.  You can see exactly what anchor text people are using when linking to your site.
  7. Pages with external links. Which are your most linked-to (read:popular) pages?  Webmaster Tools will show you most, if not all, of your incoming links.  Plus, you can view your backlinks in graph form with Glync.
  8. Remove a URL. This tool can be incredibly useful if you have duplicate content or have removed a page for some reason.  This tool goes hand-in-hand with the web crawl errors page: after you find an error, you can then remove the page from Google’s index (it usually takes only a few days to complete the process).
  9. Various other perks of having Webmaster Tools: crawl stats (how often Google crawls your site), subscriber stats (if you have a blog or email newsletter: how many subscribers do you have?), view your sitemap(s), generate and view your robots.txt file, enhance your 404 error pages (if you don’t already have a template matching your own design), and many more!

Nicki Hicks
If I add any more tools to my toolbox, where the heck am I gonna put my hammer?

A Beginner’s Guide to Google AdWords: How To Get Started

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008

AdWords is Google’s paid search program – complete with an easy-to-use interface and, when campaigns are done correctly, can actually add to your conversions.

  1. Do a keyword analysis. No ifs, ands, or buts about this one…unless you enjoy throwing away money.  Theoretically, that’s exactly what you’re doing if you choose keywords blindly.  Find out what your customers are searching for and target those keywords.  There are a ton of keyword research tools out there – both free and paid.
  2. Set up your account.
  3. Choose which is right for you: starter or standard edition.
  4. Target the right customers. You have the option to target by language (if applicable) and geographic location.


  5. Create your ad.


    Tips for creating ads:

    a.  Use keywords in your headline whenever possible.
    b.  Write a long paragraph about your business, then narrow it down to the main points.
    c.  Include negative or “filtering” language when applicable.
    d. Test, tweak, and track your campaign(s).

  6. Choose your keywords. (Using a tool like Google’s AdWords Keyword Tool will give you an idea of competition for keywords and phrases.)
  7. How much are you willing to spend? Per day?  Every time someone clicks on your ad?  You get to choose!


  8. Define your campaigns based on:
    a.  Time restraints (for example, turn your ads off at night)
    b.  Demographics (age, gender, etc.)
    c.  Geographic Location
    d.  And more!
  9. Track your conversions with Google Analytics and Placement Performance Reports from AdWords.

Paid Search in conjunction with Organic Search can really do wonders.  The key is simple: keep an eye on your stats and what your customers are searching for!

Nicki Hicks
People really DO click on the right side!

What does the PageRank in my Google Toolbar Mean?

Friday, December 12th, 2008

You may have noticed this tiny green bar on your Google toolbar that changes with every site you visit.  In its simplest terms, PageRank is one of Google’s ways to assign weight and rank to websites.

Google bases this particular algorithm off of millions of variables; the major factor being the number of (quality) incoming links.  While no one knows their true PR, the toolbar will at least give you an idea of where you’re at: with a number from 1-10, 1 being low PR and 10 high PR.  (Similarly, you will never know exactly how many incoming links your site has, but Yahoo’s Site Explorer will give you a fairly close number).  Google updates toolbar PageRank approximately every 3 months.

Being somewhat inquisitive, I decided to investigate a little further.  I took a look at 10 sites – with toolbar PR of 1-10.

I also included age because I’ve seen PageRank increase over time, simply from gaining trust from traffic rather than backlinks.  I wanted to test whether or not it had much impact on PR.  However, from this small sample, it seems too difficult to infer that age has anything to do with PR.  Perhaps with a larger sample, I could decide differently.

However, it is easy to see the direct relation between PR and backlinks.  Due to the drastic change in the number of backlinks, I had to split the charts: PR 10-6, then PR 5-1 following in order to see the similarities.

What I learned and confirmed

  1. Don’t rely on your toolbar PR; use it instead as a relative guide.
  2. Get as many quality, incoming links as you can.
  3. Since blogs generally acquire more backlinks than regular sites, a young blog can have a better PageRank than an older site.
  4. The only other website with a PR 10 (as far as anyone can tell) than Google, USA.gov, has just over 11 million backlinks – millions less than any examples I provided above a PR 7  – proving the power of a .gov (.edu’s are powerful too!).

Nicki Hicks
Watch your back(links)

New from Google: SearchWiki and Search-based keyword tool

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008

Lately, 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?!?

Nicki Hicks
Does ‘Googlers Anonymous’ already exist?

Voice Search Added to Google’s iPhone Search App

Monday, November 24th, 2008

The 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!

Nicki Hicks
Vocal Searcher



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