Posts Tagged ‘SERP’

A Search Box Within Google’s Search Engine Results Page?

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

Searching this afternoon led me to an interesting discovery: a search box, located right in the Google Search Results Page:

site search google serp

I can definitely see the power of having a function like this – especially for large, robust websites.

Performing a search for “maine” in this search box would surely return a search result page from the US SBA website, right? Wrong.

site search results

A Google search result page of the website is served up.

Having neither seen nor heard anything about this, I started looking around for an article about it. No such luck.

Has anyone else seen anything like this?

Update: Shines and Jecker was kind enough to point me in the right direction.

Nicki Hicks
(Un)stumped
.

How to Write the Best, Most Clickable Title Tags

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

Allow me to preface this by saying: SEO is an art, not a science. So my recipe for title perfection needs to be experimented with – you will have different results with every industry. That said, titles are important. It can be argued they are the most important.

As always, start by figuring out what your customers are searching for. If you don’t optimize for the right words, then you really don’t have a shot at even being a choice on a search results page.

Keeping in mind what the page is about, here’s a hand-to-the-forehead thought: you’ll want to incorporate those keywords in the title. Now you sit down to write that fabulous title tag and wonder how long should it be? SEOs disagree about this, but: there is no correct length to a good title. Google allows for 65 characters to be shown in the SERPs and, as far as I’m concerned, it’s not a big deal if the title is 65+ characters. My rule of thumb? The same as copy writing: as long as it takes to get the job done.

That said, don’t create such a long title that expands past the width of my browser (in a wide screened Mac, to boot). Along the same lines, please please PLEASE don’t stuff the title full of every synonym for your keywords that you can think of.

Alright, so what have we got now? A bunch of really great keywords. Now, put them together in a way that makes sense – something that accurately describes the page.

This next part is your choice: your company name. The thing is, as long as you have a fairly unique name, you’ll rank well for someone searching for your name. I tend to put it in every title just for good measure.

Finally, I put in the location. Obviously this would only apply for local businesses. The thing to remember is that local search is dependent on more than just the title; but having it here is absolutely helpful.

Last but not least, is the way it looks – and most people quite honestly may not think about it, but would you click on a ReSuLt tHaT LoOkEd lIkE ThIs? My personal preference is to capitalize the first letter of words that make sense – much as you would for a blog post title. Then separate major “sections” (in this case: keywords, company name, and location) with a mixture of colons, semicolons, hyphens, and vertical lines: whichever you prefer.

So, in the end we have something that looks like this:

Really Great Stupendous Clickable Exactly What I’m Looking For Phrase: My Company – Where I Am, USA

Nicki Hicks
Page Title Extraordinaire

Google Follows Through with Threats: Blocks WebPosition Gold

Thursday, August 7th, 2008

After threatening for quite some time, Google finally did it: they blocked WebPosition Gold from making searches.  If you check out Google’s Guidelines, you’ll see that they strongly recommend NOT using anything like WebPosition (they use the name specifically).

Personally, I like the program.  It’s a quick and easy way to show clients their rankings on their top 40 (or so) keywords on whichever search engines you’d like (I typically stick with the top four, but Google is obviously the one that really matters).  It is, however, quite possible and only slightly time consuming to search for your keywords on Google and collect a list of rankings the hard way.

After reading a Search Engine Roundtable article on the matter, I did my own little test.  I ran a report for one of our clients and found that, yes indeedy, no Google results were found for any of my keywords.  I suppose this means it truly is back to checking rankings the old fashioned way!

The problem is that high rankings look so good and are such an easy measurement to see if your SEO is actually working.  But it’s incredibly easy to get caught up in the whirlwind that is: “YES! I moved up two spots today!” or “NO! I’m on the second page at Google. Yesterday I was on the first! What happened?!”  For what it’s worth, it’s been proven that it’s actually better to be at the top of the second SERP (#s 11-13) rather than the bottom of the first (something like #s 7-10).  It just goes to show you, rankings are great; but what really matters is the number of relevant users and conversions your site gets.  That, my friend, is the point of good SEO.

Nicki Hicks
Ex-WebPosition User



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