Speaking at SMX London – May 13th 2014
A new post from www.davidnaylor.co.uk. BAZINGA!
The post Speaking at SMX London – May 13th 2014 appeared first on SEO Blog by Dave Naylor – SEO Tools, Tips & News.
Google’s Effective ‘White Hat’ Marketing Case Study

There’s the safe way & the high risk approach. The shortcut takers & those who win through hard work & superior offering.
One is white hat and the other is black hat.
With the increasing search ecosystem instability over the past couple years, some see these labels constantly sliding, sometimes on an ex-post-facto basis, turning thousands of white hats into black hats arbitrarily overnight.
Are you a white hat SEO? or a black hat SEO?
Do you even know?
Before you answer, please have a quick read of this Washington Post article highlighting how Google manipulated & undermined the US political system.
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Seriously, go read it now.
It’s fantastic journalism & an important read for anyone who considers themselves an SEO.
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Take the offline analog to Google’s search “quality” guidelines & in spirit Google repeatedly violated every single one of them.
Advertorials
creating links that weren’t editorially placed or vouched for by the site’s owner on a page, otherwise known as unnatural links can be considered a violation of our guidelines. Advertorials or native advertising where payment is received for articles that include links that pass PageRank
Advertorials are spam, except when they are not: “the staff and professors at GMU’s law center were in regular contact with Google executives, who supplied them with the company’s arguments against antitrust action and helped them get favorable op-ed pieces published“
Deception
Don’t deceive your users.
Ads should be clearly labeled, except when they are not: “GMU officials later told Dellarocas they were planning to have him participate from the audience,” which is just like an infomercial that must be labeled as an advertisement!
Preventing Money from Manipulating Editorial
Make reasonable efforts to ensure that advertisements do not affect search engine rankings. For example, Google’s AdSense ads and DoubleClick links are blocked from being crawled by a robots.txt file.
Money influencing outcomes is wrong, except when it’s not: “Google’s lobbying corps — now numbering more than 100 — is split equally, like its campaign donations, among Democrats and Republicans. … Google became the second-largest corporate spender on lobbying in the United States in 2012.”
Content Quality
The best way to get other sites to create high-quality, relevant links to yours is to create unique, relevant content that can naturally gain popularity in the Internet community. Creating good content pays off: Links are usually editorial votes given by choice, and the more useful content you have, the greater the chances someone else will find that content valuable to their readers and link to it.
Payment should be disclosed, except when it shouldn’t: “The school and Google staffers worked to organize a second academic conference focused on search. This time, however, Google’s involvement was not publicly disclosed.”
Cloaking
Cloaking refers to the practice of presenting different content or URLs to human users and search engines. Cloaking is considered a violation of Google’s Webmaster Guidelines because it provides our users with different results than they expected.
cloaking is evil, except when it’s not: Even as Google executives peppered the GMU staff with suggestions of speakers and guests to invite to the event, the company asked the school not to broadcast its involvement. “We will certainly limit who we announce publicly from Google”
…and on and on and on…
It’s not safe to assume that just because a specific deceptive technique isn’t included on this page, Google approves of it.
And while they may not approve of something, that doesn’t mean they avoid the strategy when mapping out their own approach.
There’s a lesson & it isn’t a particularly subtle one.
More and more, it looks like that invisible hand shaping the market actually belongs to Google. http://t.co/fFigz7lMSY— Matt Pearce (@mattdpearce) April 13, 2014
Free markets aren’t free. Who could have known?
10 Smart Tips to Leverage Google+ for Increased Web Traffic
Posted by Cyrus-Shepard
This time, it’s about engaged traffic.
While checking our stats here at Moz, we noticed that while visits sent to us from Facebook keep decreasing, traffic from Google+ has started to appear significant by comparison.

While not everyone has an audience active on Google+, the number of people who interact socially with any Google products on a monthly basis now reportedly exceeds 500 million.
What’s different about Google+ is that beyond the direct social visits as seen above, Google offers marketers the opportunity to interact with visitors through many more touch points, including YouTube and directly in search results. This means that for visitors who engage with you through Google+, the potential traffic channels multiply.
For this method to work, it requires that your visitors actually engage.
Facebook and Twitter experts know this and perfected their engagement craft over several years. Engagment with Google+ means a new set tactics and best practices. These are areas that I consistently see otherwise expert brands fall short and miss easy opportunities.
Let’s discuss supercharging our Google+ engagement.
1. Headlines, every time
The more users notice your Google+ posts, the more likely they are to engage. The challenge is to stand out in a sea of thousands of posts.
First things first. Unlike other social platforms, Google+ posts act more like mini blog posts, and every post needs a headline. Not only does adding a header help your post stand out, but Google uses the first words of your post in two different ways:
- They incorporates your headline into the title tag of the post
- The headline is typically what displays in Google search results

Adding the right headline can help your post stand out in search results, and can greatly influence the number of people who both notice and click through to your content.
Use a headline, every time.
2. Formatting for attention
Easily break up your long blocks of text with formatting to make your posts simpler to read and skim. This allows you to communicate more clearly and makes your text more accessible.
In addition to adding
bold to your headline, copy and paste the formatting cheats below to help compose a post that stands out from the rest.
G+ Formatting Cheats:
*This is a Bolded Headline*
_
Italic_
_*
Bold*_
-Strikethrough-
Mix and match styles: _*Bolded Italic*_
Numbered List:
*1.* Point One
*2.* Point Two
*3.* Point Three
Bulleted List:
• Point 1
• Point 2
• Point 3
Link:
http://example.com
#hashtag1 #hashtag2
How it Looks:

3. Use your words
Google+ is a both a visual and a text medium, so make them both count!
Don’t be afraid of writing
longer posts. Instead of simply posting a link to your latest blog posts and hoping for the best, add a summary of your important points. Explain why this is important. Give people additional context as to why they should click and share.
Personal example of Google+ posts where I
embraced the long-form:
- Introducing The Web Developer’s SEO Cheat Sheet 2.0 • 308 +1s, 222 Reshares
- 5 Takeaways and Assumptions from Matt Cutt’s Video on Authority vs. Popularity • 194 +1s, 94 Reshares
- New Google Title Tag Length Guidelines: 55 Characters • 152 +1s, 180 Reshares
The few minutes it takes to jot down your thoughts could result in multiple reshares and thousands of additional eyeballs on your content.
4. Use your images too
The vast majority of top posts on Google+ use images. In fact, the most popular post I’ve personally ever shared was a simple animated GIF.

For increased shareability, it’s usually best to upload your own photo.
By default, Google+ tries to include an image for any URL that you share. Unless you define the right Open Graph images and the proper social meta tags, the images are often not ideal, or are sized wrong.
When you upload your own image, the image links to the full-size version, not the URL you want to share. In this case, don’t forget to include a link to the URL in the text.
5. Smarter sharing > targeted
Most people set their post to “public,” thinking this gives them maximum exposure. In fact, there is a much more effective way to gain exposure to your top content, as long as you don’t abuse it.
By also adding your circles and select individuals to your share settings, this triggers a notification for those users that you’ve shared a post directly with them.
Used smartly, these notifications can greatly influence the amount of activity on a post.

Warning: When targeted sharing is used too often, it turns spammy. Be careful what you share.
Only choose your very best, most important posts.
Amazingly, Google+ also allows you to notify people in your circles via email when you share. In order for this to work, the individuals must have their email notifications set up correctly. Be extra careful with this function, as it can turn people off fast!
6. The mighty, mighty #hashtag
Twitter and Facebook have made us accustomed to hashtags, but Google+ uses them in entirely different ways to organize and recommend content.
Google uses hashtags and semantic analysis to form relationships between topics. For example, consider this hashtag search for #linkbuilding. Notice the related topics Google associates with link building:

These associations aren’t random. In fact, Mark Traphagen demonstrates how you can “teach” Google these relationships by tagging your own posts.
By default, Google often adds hashtags automatically to any post with sufficient text. Best practice is to add your own relevant hashtags at the end or within the body of each post.
7. Find the followed links
The followed link on Google+ has gone the way of the dodo.
When Google+ was born, it was a bonanza for links, and seen as an SEO paradise. Since that time, Google has replaced most equity passing followed links with nofollow, which pass no link equity. This includes profile links, “contributor to,” and shared URLs.
There is one exception. Public +1’s remain followed.

For now, whenever a visitor +1s your content without sharing it to their stream, this results in a followed link as long as the visitor has +1’s set to “public.”
This could be an oversight, or Google could remove these followed links soon.
While the value of +1s for SEO has been debated again and again, this may be the last remaining place that a +1 may actually pass link equity.
8. Leverage Google+ comments
I’m sort of in love with the Google+ commenting system.
Much like Facebook’s popular commenting plugin, you can embed Google+ comments on your own blog. What makes this so powerful is when visitors leave a comment, they are given the option of sharing your post to their own Google+ followers.
This can greatly increase engagement among these users and their followers.

Officially, Google+ comments are only supported for Google’s own Blogger platform. Fortuneatly, clever folks have devised a number of plugins and solutions for Wordpress, Drupal, and more.
9. +Post Ads: the future of social engagement?
Google’s +Post Ads offer an interesting premise: take your most successful Google+ posts and turn them into ads that show all over Google’s massive display network.
This exposes your posts to more people who otherwise would not have interacted with your brand on Google+ alone. This interaction drives more social sharing, and the sharing can continue after the paid promotion is over.
For example, if you are a car manufacturer, you could target your Google+ posts to appear on auto parts websites.

While still early in adoption, +Post Ads present a unique opportunity for businesses to attract customers at different stages of the buying cycle, and then keep those customers engaged through social media.
While the jury is still out if +Post Ads will be effective, it will likely take some time for marketers to learn how to effectively leverage this channel.
10. Interactive posts
Interactive Google+ posts allow you to perfectly customize how your content is shared, but they also allow you to prompt your social audience to take a specific action.

Google maintains an impressive list of actions which you can automatically embed into your post. These include:
- Watch a video
- Sign up for a newsletter
- Reserve a table at a restaurant
- Open an app
- …and about 100 more.
Mike Arnesen wrote up a good overview of getting started with Interactive posts, or you can find more at the Google Developers blog.
Building your influence
Google+ isn’t so much a social media platform like Twitter and Facebook, but an identity platform that works with Google to connect across all our different devices and web services.
This means that while sites like Facebook and Twitter can still deliver traffic to your website, Google+ is so integrated across so many platforms that it has many more places to touch potential visitors. Business that build up their audience base today potentially position themselves to collect bigger rewards in the future.
Do you receive traffic from Google+? Is it a part of your social strategy? Let us know in the comments below.
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SearchCap: SSL Ranking Boost, Cortana Compared & Google’s Lobbying Efforts
Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web. From Search Engine Land: Google’s Matt Cutts Explains How Google Search Handles 404 & 410 Status Codes Google’s head of search spam, Matt Cutts, posted a video today…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
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How to Submit Your Site to Google News
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Yext Launches Store Locator Pages
Today Yext announced the launch of Yext Pages – a store location finder service that complements its Powerlistings local listings management service. Pretty cool stuff if you are local brand manager who can’t seem to get your IT department to get around to updating/building location pages. And automatically keeping your onsite location pages in sync […]
The post Yext Launches Store Locator Pages appeared first on Local SEO Guide.
Secure Search, Rank & Finding Lost Keyword Traffic: A Conversation with gShift
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Google’s Matt Cutts Explains The Differences Between 404 & 410 Status Codes
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Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Google’s Matt Cutts Lobbying To Reward Secure Sites With Better Rankings
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Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
New Facebook Test: Popular Pages In Your Area
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A Definition for White Hat Link Building: What it is and What it excludes
The phrase “white hat link building” occurs nearly 1/2 million times on Google yet we do not have a clear definition of the phrase.
read more
Videos: Comparing Cortana & Siri & Google Now
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Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Report: Google Now Master Of Lobbying, Backroom Dealing
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Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Facebook Unveils New Spam Algorithms
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Google Glass Now Kosher For Passover
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Google Panda Refresh Or Softer Panda Update?
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