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7 Reasons to Remove "Link Building" from Our Vocabulary

Posted by Carson-Ward

Double disclaimer: This really is my own opinion, and may not be the official position of either Moz or Distilled.

“We’ve only built high-quality links.”

I see variations on this theme often; sadly, I see it most commonly in laments composed by those affected by Google’s Penguin update. After years of consulting, dozens of penalty-related questions in Moz’s Q&A, and careful consideration, I am convinced that the idea of “building links” has been heartbreakingly detrimental to our industry and many site owners. I will argue that everyone — marketers and SEOs included — would be better off if we stopped talking about building links altogether.

It may seem insane to many in the industry to speak of discarding “link building” as an action, goal, or job description. I certainly understand the objections, but I only ask that you consider the whole of my argument before coming to a conclusion.

1. Link building isn’t a process or goal

Our goal is almost always direct or indirect profitability. Where organic search marketing is concerned, profitability comes from qualified traffic, and qualified traffic comes largely from favorable search engine positions. Favorable search results are achieved to a significant extent by acquiring links from diverse high-authority domains.

Nothing above looks too controversial yet, but why then should we not focus on links? If links lead to higher rankings and eventually to profitability, we should build links, right? This makes sense until we expand the diagram.

Direct link building is a process that only a spammer or link buyer can do. I prefer “link earning” — a phrase I’ve borrowed from Danny Sullivan’s legendary rant and Rand Fishkin’s Whiteboard Friday — but I see no reason why our efforts and successes should be constrained by links. Some online marketing tactics may also contribute directly to rankings, and some definitely contribute directly to traffic.

Even those who neither spam nor buy links have become so focused on link acquisition that many de-emphasize or even ignore what comes before or after. We heard some amazing forward-thinking talks at Mozcon, almost all about real, legitimate, and sustainable marketing. Even then, we heard far more about the number of links obtained than we did about rankings, traffic, or profitability.

I am not suggesting that we stop caring about links. Link data can be used for many valuable tasks including the following:

  • Find external pages that appear to have generated awareness and increased visibility. We can, for example, use Open Site Explorer to understand industry challenges and past successes.
  • Provide valuable insights into campaigns that are still in progress.
  • Find potential marketing targets (e.g. those who shared a similar piece of content).
  • Explain current rankings.

There are plenty of additional reasons why link data is fantastic. I am merely suggesting we stop leading people to death by Penguin.

When we focus on links as a process and a goal, we’re working towards the measurement rather than the goal the measurement was intended to measure. Profitability is the goal — events, guest posts, or content pieces are the methods and tactics to get there. If we achieve the goal through a combination of organic traffic, cross-coverage, and direct traffic, I doubt anyone will complain. We might even be more effective as marketers by considering more pieces in the puzzle.

2. Google wants to kill “link building” as a process

This isn’t about being a “white hat” anything. I, for one, cringe when referenced as a “white hat” marketer — it stings like a label for someone adhering to dogma set forth by infallible Google. I’m with Dr. Pete on this hat nonsense. If I thought buying links was a smart risk-free way to make money, I would suggest we all buy links. I am simply a believer in sustainable marketing tactics.

“The philosophy that we’ve always had is if you make something that’s compelling then it would be much easier to get people to write about it and to link to it. And so a lot of people approach it from a direction that’s backwards. They try to get the links first and then they want to be grandfathered in or think they will be a successful website as a result.”
-Matt Cutts in an interview with Eric Enge

Matt says link building isn’t inherently evil, but only when we get it mixed up. We run afoul of search engines only when we look at links with tunnel vision, as in the first diagram above, as an activity rather than an outcome.

We should care what Google wants, if only because it’s dangerous and difficult to fight against them in the long run. I once warned about what would eventually be called “Penguin” in March of 2012 — just one month before the first Penguin update — and met some strong resistance claiming Google would never penalize for links, but only devalue them.

It’s a mistake to underestimate what Google can and will do. Counter-spam might move slower than spam most of the time, but I suspect Penguin won’t be our last reality check for artificial links.

3. Modern Google is not a link-counting machine

Regardless of what Google will do in the future, we should also consider what Google can already do today. What were links meant to measure in the first place? Why did Google use them, and how did they help? We know that links help to filter out the garbage on the web, and they are still heavily used because link data helps to measure the popularity and authority of a site and page.

We know Google understands more than followed links and anchor text. Embeds have been called “links for videos.” Citations are “links for local.” Google uses URL text for discovery, even if the text isn’t an explicit link. The search engine has long understood which words are related to one another, and which brands relate to which words — as anyone who has used the Google keyword tool can attest. We just heard a presentation from Dr. Matt showing a correlation between social shares and brand mentions with rankings.

We don’t know everything about Google and the algorithm. Perhaps Google is using co-occurrence as a ranking factor, but can we really doubt the search engine looks at good-old-fashioned occurrence as a measuring stick for site authority and popularity? It’s not unlikely that Google is using a combination of data sources — mentions, links, offline brand metrics, etc. — to measure or confirm popularity.

We also need to back up and consider the degree to which popularity, awesome products, useful content and great web pages drive all popularity signals, and to what extent they are used by Google. Facebook likes correlate with site traffic whether Google ever looked at them or not. Even with great statistics and a few tests, we can’t be totally sure about how much Google uses which signal or under what circumstances. Why focus on simply building links when Google uses more than links? Why obsess over a small HTML element when we have the ability and skills to improve multiple metrics and build visibility with or without Google?

4. Qualifying “good links” doesn’t stick

Perhaps “building links” isn’t a bad idea as long as the links are good. Even though I agree, we still need to stop talking about building links. Even if we could list every possible quality that defines a “good link,” we find that we have an overly-technical and roundabout way of saying “market to your audience.”

No matter how many caveats we add, or how precisely and carefully we define “high-quality links,” people still seem to come away with their own version of what a good link is. The value of a link is far less intuitive than the value of coverage and visibility.

Adria Saracino wrote an enormous post last year about nothing other than qualifying link prospects. More could have been written, but I’m not sure more could have been retained or recalled. To keep clients focused on the real goals rather than links, Adria has begun pushing internally and externally for a stronger focus on revenue rather than links alone.

Rankings and links are benchmarks, not processes — a way to track progress on the way towards our real goals of qualified traffic and sales.

5. Link obsession can hurt relationships

Asking people to add links, change the post, or edit their existing links can appear selfish and demanding. I believe most people who do so are not selfish people, but rather people whose success is measured in terms of links above all else.

… And now I want to remove any mention of the source. This is a ridiculous example, but illustrative of where “link building” has led us.

Sometimes building awareness with an audience is better than link building. Coverage and relationships with publishers leads to more coverage, awareness, and — yes — even more links. But once again, links are not the goal; they are merely one outcome and benefit of marketing with the goal of profitability.

If you do want to risk additional requests from those who have already been kind enough to cover your topic, take Phil Nottingham’s advice and offer something of value (in his example, HD quality video) in the process.

6. Focusing on links leads to missed opportunities

I was recently reminded of a short-term consulting project I worked on where a large client had dedicated as much as $20,000 per month and a full-time employee’s time to buying and renting links. They hadn’t been caught yet, and their rankings were relatively solid, but improvement was minimal. The total traffic from paid links — mostly footer links — was in the low thousands.

The company was so risk averse (a pet peeve of mine) that they were unwilling to stop because their competitors were also buying links. To my knowledge, we never convinced the client to spend half as much producing content or seeking real visibility.

Even giving the money away would be more effective marketing. What blogger wouldn’t participate in a contest for a chance to win a free car? You could literally drop $20k in cash from your rooftop in a press event and generate more publicity, and probably from more and better sources if done well.

It’s true that the case above is the second or third most extreme example of link-centric myopia I’m aware of, but one need not look far to see less dramatic examples.

For instance, the cost of a typical unbranded guest blog post will also far exceed its value. From first contact to actual posting, the submission will easily take a few hours. More importantly, marketers focused on corresponding with blog owners for links are not focusing on building better businesses, products, content, or websites. The opportunity cost for tactics where link building is the only goal can be enormous — and why, when even guest posting could bring both links and awareness?

7. Marketers should differentiate their services from spammers

The results of emphasizing link building are predictable: marketers new to the industry hear so much about link building that they become desperate for links and turn to spam and paid links. Similarly, clients hear regularly that they need links, and set link goals for their employee or agency. Then, Penguin unleashes its wrath almost exclusively on those who focus on link-building as a process. And, we wonder why it’s so hard to change the perception of SEO in the industry.

Consider this, if you are “link building,” you’re either spamming links or doing online marketing. Those who are practicing sustainable marketing tactics may do well to distance themselves and their activities from spammers using the same terms.

So, what should we do instead?

“Link building” is a phrase used by most industry experts, many of whom I respect deeply. Unfortunately, their use of such terms grants a sort of license, shelter, and reassurance to people doing a very different kind of link building. The ambiguity can take new marketers some time to figure out, and our industry and personal reputations suffer at the hands of ineffective marketing.

Among those who agree with the philosophy presented above, the required change is simple: it’s just a matter of using new words. Many others may find adjustment more difficult; I hope and believe they will also find it more rewarding.

Use better words, track better metrics

When we talk about obtaining visibility, awareness, traffic, or coverage, we immediately ensure we and our clients are talking about similar goals. For processes, we can talk about the actual tactic, whether it’s outreaching for an infographic or hosting a webinar.

If, for some reason, we need to refer to these processes in aggregate, terms like “inbound marketing,” “online marketing,” and “content marketing” might be right, depending on the breadth and focus of services offered.

Changing our choice of words admittedly has less impact than changing what we do, but even altering the use of words can have a surprising effect. “What can we do to get links?” sets an unnecessary and artificial constraint on marketing activities, thereby limiting our marketing to a few activities and making the goal of links explicit.

For the last several months, I’ve been trying to ask better questions. “What can we do to increase visibility and generate awareness? What can we do to drive more qualified traffic? What can we do to increase profit per qualified visitor?” Followed links may be a facet of the resulting strategy, but they are unlikely to be its entire purpose.

We ensure that we’re building better businesses when we track the results of our efforts and report on their impacts. To ensure we are working effectively it’s wise to continue tracking the places we have requested and received online coverage, but we’re more interested in revenue first, traffic second, and rankings third. Coverage (sometimes as standard links) and rankings matter, but only to show progress while working towards traffic and revenue.

Do better marketing

I’m truly excited that we have the skills and knowledge to do something better in a way that other marketers cannot. We have tools that other marketers don’t use in their research, giving us insights into what works before we start building or emailing anyone. We understand the Internet, search engines, and traffic generation. The future looks bright if we can get our priorities straight.

Awareness over links

It is easier to slip links into posts about diverse topics than it is to write a post about a product, service, or company. We all know the kind of guest post I’m talking about: guest posts on mommy blogs that suddenly include suspiciously-targeted anchor text. Posts on pet blogs somehow slipping in a link to a web hosting company. They look like this:

How many people out of a thousand would click on that link? One, maybe two? Compare that with a guest post on the Wall Street Journal by the CEO of a relatively small company.

It’s about the company, branded and obvious. It was no doubt many times harder to obtain this coverage, but it builds awareness, authority, and some links while it’s at it.

You don’t need to get in front of the Journal — you just need to get in front of your target audience. Find out where your audience is, where they are reading, and then talk to them. Build or say something that they will care about, and find interesting, surprising, and useful. If your audience reads mommy blogs, post on mommy blogs. You can build more awareness and more links if you make the posts about your company, product, service, or content rather than sneaking a link in. Such guest posts require more effort and knowledge, but they can actually accomplish goals worth caring about.

Visibility over authority

Imagine a hypothetical situation where you could choose to place an article in one of the following locations:

  1. A large news site, Domain Authority 95, with millions of readers. Your article would be posted in a subcategory of a section where at most 500 people might read it.
  2. A medium-sized blog, Domain Authority 65, with roughly 10,000 readers per day. The blog posts once per day, and your article would be on the home page for the full day.
Most in our industry would choose (1) in a heartbeat. For the reasons outlined above, I would undoubtedly choose (2). We should seek visibility in what we do, even if we sometimes cant get followed links out of it. Even if the resulting Page Authority of the linking page is lower in the end, there is value in higher visibility insofar as there is value in a site’s offerings.

Audiences over rankings

Businesses like MailChimp and Dropbox define their industries. Their brand names dwarf the generic/unbranded terms, most of which they rank for anyway. Their brands overshadow even terms that are broader than the entire industry. Dropbox has more searches than even the most ambiguous terms, dwarfing single-word searches like “storage.” MailChimp doesn’t need to rank first for “mailing list management,” but it would make Google look bad to do otherwise.

No doubt both receive millions of visits from Google, and no doubt the vast majority are branded. Before posting a mediocre post on a mediocre blog with an anchor text link tucked in the back, consider the opportunity cost of seeking keyword rankings rather than audiences.

Better businesses over all

Respected venture capitalist Paul Graham is fond of saying, “make something people want.” Hearing this phrase as advice more than once makes it instantly sound trite, but the underlying philosophy is actually profound. “Of all the potential advice, that is the one thing you should do.” Not build links, not rank highly in Google, but make something people want; you will love your job, and people will love your company.

This philosophy applies to products, services, and business models, but it also applies to marketing and content. SEOs and other digital marketers can and should help make businesses better. We can provide valuable insights into building better websites, better content, and better messaging. When we have built something people want, they will want to share what we have made and said.


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Why You Might Be Losing Rankings to Pages with Fewer Links, Worse Targeting, and Poor Content

Posted by randfish

Most of us have a pretty good sense for the best ways to improve our search rankings, including earning links, targeting the people who search for us, and making sure our sites contain high-quality content. Sometimes, though, we get outranked by sites that clearly have work to do in these areas. In today’s Whiteboard Friday, Rand explains some of the reasons why that might happen to you.

Why You Might Be Losing Rankings to Pages with Fewer Links Worse Targeting and Poor Content – Whiteboard Friday

For reference, here’s a still image of this week’s whiteboard:

Video Transcription

Howdy Moz fans, and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week, I want to address a question that comes up all the time. I get so much email about this. So many people asking in Q&A, the Moz Q&A, about:

“Why am I losing rankings to a site or page that has fewer links, worse keyword targeting, and/or poor content?” It’s usually some combination of these. A lot of times it’s fewer links and poor content, or they’re not targeting a keyword at all, and their content’s terrible. “Why are they outranking me?”

I want to try and address why that might be happening for you, because it’s such a common theme. I think, as SEOs and marketers, we’re trained to look at the data. We look at who’s ranking for chicken coops, and we see these three results, and we go and check. Okay, how many links does this site have? How many links does the page have? What’s the page authority? What’s the domain authority? What does the anchor text look like? Is it an exact match domain, and maybe it’s getting some domain biasing from that, or those kind of things. And then, when we don’t see one of those patterns that we’re accustomed to, we go, “Why is that happening? What’s going on there? I don’t understand why I’m seeing this page outrank my page.” So I’m going to try and address those.

First off, let’s understand the basics of what’s going on in rankings, because there are multiple things. First off, domain based features. So it could be that MNN, which I think is Mother Nature Network maybe it has a very powerful domain, or not as powerful a domain, in terms of domain authority and trust and those kind of things.

There are page based features. This is like the content of the page and the keywords that it’s targeting and how it’s doing that, as well as the content experience on the page and the links that are coming to the page. The individual URL, not the domain broadly.

Then there are listing based features, meaning: Have they done a good job of making this a very compelling thing for a user to click? We’ve certainly seen examples of where making a more compelling snippet has actually boosted people’s rankings as more people click it, and Google is seeing that searcher behavior, and now they’re saying, “Oh well, if so many people like this result and they’re scrolling down to find it, then we should probably be bumping it up.”

Of course, there are secondary benefits to that, which is the more people who click your listing, the more people you get exposed to, and the more links you can earn, and all those kinds of second order benefits.

But it’s not just these things, or it is these things, but it’s also a bunch of different inputs that can be affecting these, and so I’m going to walk you through some of those.

What I really like asking is, “When we’re being outranked, where do we have weaknesses that the other listings have strengths?” I think this is a common way of going about this, but it’s not always numeric. It’s not always quantitative. Sometimes it’s qualitative, and sometimes you have to ask yourself tough questions.

Do I have a poor listing or a poor snippet? Is this something where, out of all the listings on here, someone would want to click mine more than anything else? That’s a copywriting challenge, it’s a creativity challenge, and it’s a empathy challenge. We want to be inside people’s heads. If we were to go and get a room full of a hundred people who performed a search for chicken coops, and we asked them, “What would make you click on a listing? What would inspire you to say, ‘Wow, that’s what I want to see.'”
A lot of time it might be something like this.

If you’re being outranked in this search result by Mother Nature Network, and you’re going, “But I actually sell chicken coops, they don’t,” think about how compelling it is to say, “Oh eight awesome urban chicken coops.”

Well, given population trends and how chicken coops are rising, it’s very possible that lots of people who live in cities and dense urban areas are searching for chicken coops right now. So this kind of an article, that’s inspiring and interesting to them, might be better than what I’ve got, which is chicken coop designs or backyard chicken coops, those kinds of things. Maybe that’s what’s going on, and we need to have a real conversation about who those people are, what they’re searching for, and whether we’re providing something that’s really compelling for them to click on.

Likewise the brand and domain. People have a hard time hearing this, and for any of you out there who are consultants, or agencies, or are a marketer who joined an organization, you know that there’s nothing harder than going to your boss, or your board, or the client and saying, “Your baby is just ugly. Nobody likes your brand, and people don’t enjoy interacting with it, and they don’t have a positive association with it. We’re going to have to change that if we want to move the needle on any of these other tactics.”

This is true in social. It’s true in content creation, and content marketing. It’s true in SEO for sure, and remember that brand bias is one of the strongest signals. A lot of people say, when surveyed and when they do tests, that the domain name, the brand is what biases their click, and they might click on something lower if it has a better brand association for them.

Likewise user experience and design. One of the most fascinating case studies, and unfortunately I can’t talk about fully, transparently, because this is an interaction that I had with someone who did not give me permission to disclose it. It’s a big brand. It’s a brand that you’ve heard of, a site that you’ve heard of, and they had this experience where their user experience changed at one point, and they made a conscious decision to change it. It was providing sort of a worse experience for people coming to them for search results, but they were getting a higher conversion rate as a result of how they changed the experience, and Google just dropped them way down. Their search traffic cratered and fell off a cliff. They had anticipated that they would be hurt by it a little, but certainly not this much, and that’s speaks to the quality of user experience that you’re providing.

If Google sees lots of people go and visit your page and then come right back to the search results and click on someone else, that’s a really bad signal for them. So if you’re not answering that query and doing a great job from the landing page of delivering value, Google sees that. Whether you’re using Google Analytics or not, they see it from people coming back to the search result and clearly being unsatisfied, clicking other listings more frequently than they do when they click on someone else’s result first. That tells Google you’re not the right match, and so you want to make sure that you’re delivering that sort of user experience.

Another thing that I see sometimes is people saying, “I have more links, for more linking root domains to my page than they do.” Okay, but let’s examine a bunch of things about citations, and I don’t just mean direct links. I also mean mentions, brand mentions and brand association mentions, and I also mean things like social shares and social mentions, because remember these are all being taken into account, either as a first order direct impact or a second order effect.

So I like to ask about quality. Are those coming from high quality sites?
Are those references high quality? Are they really saying this is a good place to go for this? Remember, Google has started using things like sentiment tracking and sentiment analysis to determine are people really pissed off at this brand? If so, that’s not actually a mention that I want to make them rank higher.

I’m looking at quantity and that’s certainly something that all of us can track pretty easily.

Variety, this is one that’s tough for people. What they see is hey everyone out there is linking to me. Well, are they all exactly the same kind of stuff? Like no news sites are linking to you. No blogs are linking to you. No social shares are coming to you, but a bunch of small business websites that use your widget on their page, maybe you’ve got some sort of a tracking widget or you have a WordPress plugin, or something like that, but there’s no variety. Everything that links to you is of one particular kind, and years ago, this tactic totally worked. Now it’s much tougher. If you don’t have that broad sentiment of lots of people saying nice things and lots of kinds of people saying good things about you and linking to you, it can be tougher to win.

Also acceleration rate. Sometimes I see folks who have a really strong site, a really strong page, and they’re seeing someone with only a few links, who’s relatively new popping up, and they’re go, “What’s going on here? How are they getting so far ahead of me?” The answer often times is well, their acceleration rate is higher. You’re growing links at sort of this rate, and they’re growing links at this rate, and even though you might be up here in terms of links, and they’re way down here in terms of links, that growth rate is something that’s taken into account, especially if it’s coming fast and furious, because it suggests to Google this is really interesting right now. Lots of people might be interested in this today, this week, this month.

Next, I look at content quality and usefulness. When I’m addressing that, I want to know does the content address the searcher’s intent? One of the challenges that people have a lot of time is when they’ve got commercial products especially. So, for example, let’s say that you are selling backyard chicken coops. Your competing with folks like Williams-Sonoma and BackyardChickens.com, and you see content outranking you. You’ve got to be realizing, oh there’s a lot of people who are not looking to buy this product, but are merely interested in set up and design and learning more about it. Can I offer that educational, or resource-based, or news-based, or just design based type of content as well? Should I be blogging about this in addition to having my commercial page about it, and maybe both of those can help me perform better in the search results.

Does the content provide great or unique value than anyone else? I actually did a whole Whiteboard Friday on providing unique value. I’ll let you guys watch that one. That’s a pretty good Whiteboard Friday on this particular topic. But it could be the case that even though you’ve got a great page, with great pictures, great video, how to set up, all this good stuff, it’s not unique. There are seven other people in the top ten who do almost exactly do the same thing, and you’re not providing unique value. You need to stand out. You have to be the exception to the rule if you want to outperform, and that’s often why you see stuff that looks like it doesn’t have the metrics to perform doing so well.

Last thing, ask a little bit about results biasing. Remember that if you’re doing a search, if I’m doing a search from Seattle, Washington, I might see a lot of Seattle-based and local companies in here, even if it’s not the maps and local results, because that local impact, Google knows where I’m coming from, where my IP address is. If I’m using a mobile device, they know nearly exact where I am. That kind of biasing can hurt. So I like to append. You can do a search that appends something, like &gl equals your country code, onto a search that you uses say .co.uk. So I might go Google.co.uk?search=chicken+coops&gl=us, and now I’ve said put me in the UK. No wait, put me in the back in the U.S., and now there’s no localization, and I can see what the national, sort of geographic picture is, the non geo-biased results. If it’s geo-biasing that’s going on, it’s really going to be very, very hard to compete in those geo markets unless, you have a local presence in that market, and for a lot of searches, that’s what Google’s doing, and the best you can hope for is be the national brand that performs somewhere in here.

Also, look for mobile biasing. Remember that Google has said recently that they will discount or not rank you as well if your site doesn’t perform quickly, have responsive designs, do well on mobile devices. So that might mean that if you’re seeing a large amount of mobile searches, be careful, that’s something you definitely need to test.

And finally verticals. Sometimes Google sees that, hey, when people are searching for a particular keyword phrase, they really want video. They really want news. They really want images. If your page doesn’t have some of those features, you might not perform well even in the normal search results. Video snippets a lot of the time can help folks to perform in those types of results.

So these are all questions you can use to ask yourself in that case scenario where the numbers just aren’t lining up. I really like using Moz’s Keyword Difficulty tool, which has this advanced SERPs analysis, does this big kind of Excel spreadsheet layout of oh yeah, this is every metric about every kind of thing possible or imaginable, and now I can really get into those numbers. if you’re seeing those numbers not matching up, this is a next good step to go through, check mark by check mark, and figure out why you might not be performing.

All right everyone. Hope you enjoyed this edition of Whiteboard Friday. I look forward to the comments, and we’ll see you again next week. Take care.

Video transcription by Speechpad.com


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How Does Google Count Local Results?

Posted by Dr-Pete

I’ve become a bit obsessed with how Google counts results. You may think it’s easy (1, 2, 3… 10), but add in 7-result SERPs and blended local results, and counting to 10 is no longer a Kindergarten-level achievement. Pictures speak louder than words on this one, so let’s look at an example. Here’s a localized but de-personalized SERP for “orthodontist” — I’ve stripped out everything but titles, display URLs, and pins, to make it easier to parse:

The two sets of numbers on the left represent the two ways I think most rational people without local SEO expertise would count these results — it’s either six “pure” organic results, or 13 total results. The problem is that almost all page-1 Google SERPs have either seven or 10 organic results. So, there’s a third interpretation — this is a 10-result SERP, but some of the local 7-pack (in this case, some = four results) must be “blended” results. In other words, the local pack contains both truly local results and organic results that are being treated as local.

Hacking the start= parameter

So, how do we figure out which four are blended? You’re probably familiar with Google’s “start=” URL parameter. Even if you don’t ever enter it manually, you use it all the time — it’s what separates Google’s search result pages. So, if a basic query looks like this:

<a href="https://www.google.com/search?q=orthodontist">https://www.google.com/search?q=orthodontist</a>

…then the query to reach page two of results looks like this:

<a href="https://www.google.com/search?q=orthodontist&start=10">https://www.google.com/search?q=orthodontist&start=10</a>

It turns out that “start=10” is a bit of a cheat – it always means “jump to page 2” even if page one is a 7-result SERP. Like most coders, Google also thinks in terms of starting at zero, so for a traditional SERP “10” actually means the 11th result (page one is results 0-9).

Here’s where it gets interesting. What if you change the “start=” parameter to be something other than a multiple of ten? Turns out, it works just fine, and it gives you a stripped-down organic result page starting with the absolute position specified. In other words, setting “start=9” gives you a page with no local results that begins at the 10th organic ranking.

Counting backward to destiny

Ok, “destiny” may be a bit over the top. It turns out that you can effectively use this technique to count backward and determine the “true” organic results, as if the local pack had never appeared. You can skip straight to “start=1”, which shows the 2nd ranking forward (“start=0” is Googlese for “start from the beginning”, so you have to make some assumptions about the #1 spot).

Using this trick (“&start=1”) for my “orthodontist” query at the beginning of the post, I ended up with these results:

Since we’re starting with #2, this page actually represents organic results 2-11. It’s a little odd, but hopefully that all makes sense. So, why am I torturing you with these mental gymnastics?

Putting it all together

If we match up the URLs in the second list with our original SERP, we can determine not only which results were blended, but also what order they would’ve appeared in without the influence of the local 7-pack. It looks something like this (organic results are in green, local are counted with “L” in the number):

In this case, the first four local results in the pack are the blended results, but the 4th result is actually #9 in the original organic results. Like the old indented results, the local pack pulls any organic result that gets promoted up (to keep the pack contiguous), so in this case #9 is actually outranking the original #7 and #8.

Finding hidden opportunities

This may seem like an academic exercise, but a conversation with local SEO expert Mike Blumenthal helped me see the strategic importance. Understanding how local and organic blend in the SERP above, for example, tells us a couple of things. Google back-filled the 7-pack with three purely local results, indicating an opportunity for sites that might be weak on organic ranking factors but are decently optimized for local.

There’s also a potential opportunity for some of the lower-ranking organic results to get promoted above other organic results by improving their local ranking factors. For example, #10 could jump above #7 and #8 (using the organic counting method) with some solid local SEO efforts. In the overall SERP, #10 could jump just behind #9, effectively gaining five spots.

Effectively, there are two algorithms in play here, and they overlap. Local is no longer a purely independent consideration, and “blending” is a dynamic process that potentially opens up new opportunities. We’re going to see this with more and more “verticals,” including Knowledge Graph — these features will start to cross over into organic results and modify them with specialized sub-algorithms. Being visible in these SERPs will require an understanding of how all of the pieces fit together.


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Link Building Survey 2013 – The Results [INFOGRAPHIC]

Posted by jamesagate

This post was originally in YouMoz, and was promoted to the main blog because it provides great value and interest to our community. The author’s views are entirely his or her own and may not reflect the views of Moz, Inc.

Many of us faced a challenging 2012 and 2013 has been no different. Rankings were won and lost, a lot of bad links were removed and quite frankly a lot of businesses and departments had to be re-designed. We all know it’s a pretty “interesting� time to be in the link-building and SEO space.

Since we are now over half way through 2013 we decided it was time to gain a better understanding of how this year is going for those in the industry. The purpose of the survey was to really capture the current market sentiment and better understand how industry peers are faring.

We produced an infographic from the results (embedded in its full form at the end of this post) but I also wanted to write up an analysis here just for Moz readers simply because I feel there are quite a few interesting bits of data that are well worth discussing.

Before we get into it, a quick disclaimer:

This post is for information purposes only. These results are not intended to steer you towards specific linking tactics. Surveys have certain inherent flaws and in a market like ours where perception and reality can sometimes become disconnected the data certainly isn’t going to be perfect.

You should make business decisions based on your own experiences and data or hire a professional who is able to assist in doing so.

Adding a disclaimer might seem a little officious, but I do see it as my responsibility to add some fair warnings in here. People coming back to me in 6 month’s time saying “Your survey said paid links were widely used… why don’t I rank anymore?!â€�… can’t say they were not warned.

This is not a black hat vs. grey hat vs. white hat thing by the way; we’re all pretty much in the same boat floating on an ocean owned by someone else [Google]. My point is there are too many individuals in my opinion being given access to large audiences online who go on to author arguably flippant remarks and tenuous “facts� that get passed off as gospel. This kind of behavior likely sets many beginners or even intermediate SEOs down the wrong path or one they really don’t understand.

Now that’s out of the way, let’s get started…

Who took the survey?

I found this information interesting, not just because it helps us better understand some of the answers given later on in the survey, but because we get the chance to see how people really “label� themselves in the industry.

In our industry I guess we do spend quite a bit of time labeling ourselves or attempting to define our role within a business, but the real aim here was to see how many people called themselves a link builder with a view to observing any declines in future surveys of this kind.

As was noted in the infographic, it is great we got such a good spread of individuals answering questions as it helps to give perspective from across the organisation.

How much does your business or agency spend on link building on a monthly basis?

I was personally really looking forward to seeing the results of this particular question because I think it acts as a better barometer than most things, as to the effectiveness of link building.

By and large, people won’t continue to pour money into something that isn’t working. Businesses often vote with their wallet so to speak.

Granted, money related questions in surveys aren’t without bias because certain individuals will almost certainly inflate their figures almost instinctively.

You will note that nearly 39% of those who responded work within an organisation that spends between $5-50k+ a month on linking initiatives. That’s a decent sized budget and while obviously there will be respondents who work at an agency where this is distributed across a number of client projects, it does mean there are a number of businesses out there spending big bucks in an attempt to proactively and passively acquire links. Which as I said, means not only does that demonstrate the continued effectiveness of links as part of SEO but that the budget is justified, i.e. they can see an ROI.

The expression goes that a fool and his money are easily parted and frankly any business that can afford say $30k to invest into link building programmes is unlikely to be a fool. They are going to be seeing a return. Say what you want about other things, but links are still the dominant signal to Google and that doesn’t really look set to change.

What are some of the biggest challenges that you face in link building?

Based on the results of this question we found the five biggest challenges that anyone who does link building faces.

Here I’d like to offer up some actionable advice for each specific challenge, looking at some of the ways we internally overcome these challenges and linking out to some great resources that are out there.

Finding link prospects

I dive a bit deeper into this particular challenge in this post here.

Further reading:

Creating efficient processes

As I mentioned earlier in this post; many businesses and departments have been forced into almost entirely re-inventing themselves and their internal processes, so understandably this is one of the key challenges faced currently.

This is really a blog post all in itself, but here are a few resources that you may find useful…

Getting link prospects to respond

Never an easy thing. As the link building market swells and as outreach-dependent linking continues to surge in popularity there are naturally going to be more people out there playing the field, which can mean that certain sites are:

  • Propositioning – think about why these people want to link to you. I’m not going to go all “create great contentâ€� on your ass, but you are essentially making a sale here so if you’re not floating their boat you need to rethink your approach.

  • Diving deeper – this may sound like a prospecting tip, but if you can seek out sites which aren’t getting hit with hundreds if not thousands of emails daily, you stand a much better shot of getting a response.

  • Getting better at outreach – whether you improve your email writing or leverage a bit of psychology by learning to build links and get traffic like Derek Halpern, there is no doubt that outreach standards do matter a lot.

Determining anchor text strategy

I am a firm believer that there is no set one-size-fits-all approach to anchor text ratios. What works for some sites and in some verticals would get your burned before the week is out in other markets.

So my takeaway for this would be to talk in terms that are relative to your market and the type of project you are working on.

If you are looking for a walkthrough then have a read of this.

Knowing which links are helpful and/or harmful

There are some great services/tools out there that can help you to audit your backlinks and proactively manage the risk of future linking campaigns. This information is just a few mouse clicks away and whilst you probably shouldn’t rely solely on the judgment of a tool, it can cut down tremendously on the legwork and even guesswork that goes into determining which links are helpful and which are harmful in your profile.

A tool like LinkRisk allows you to spot the harmful links but also help you identify the really strong ones as a result of your link prospecting efforts.

What are the most common forms of link building?

I have to say that this one didn’t really deliver too many surprises. 2012/2013 has seen a meteoric increase in guest blogging activities which tells you a few things really; they are effective when done well and you almost certainly need to be diversifying your stable of tactics, because if we’ve all noticed an increase in guest posts I think it will be safe to say Google has as well.

5% of respondents admitted to participating in paid linking. I was quite surprised that even this many people admitted to it and I congratulate their honesty, because I guarantee that the number is higher than this 🙂 .

What are the 5 most effective link building tactics?

We asked respondents to rate a wide range of linking tactics on a scale of 1-5. 1 being potentially damaging all the way through to 5 being extremely effective. We then organised these into a top 5 of tactics based on the average rating that these received:

Author bio vs. in-content?

A common question we come up against relates to the effectiveness of guest posts where the link is in the author bio vs. placed within the body of the content.

We have seen no evidence to suggest one is more effective than the other and we recommend a combination of the two simply because placing a strict restriction, like in-content, only can limit some strong publishers for example.

Here is how our respondents feel about this subject:

Infographic directory vs. targeted blog?

Similarly we wanted to get a feel for the general market consensus as to the effectiveness of gaining a placement of an infographic on a blog versus getting loads of placements on infographic galleries/directories.

We have found placements of infographics on targeted, top-tier publishers to be a highly effective method for enhancing search engine visibility I would also argue that some of the better quality infographic galleries are a worthwhile link to secure.

I am talking about the ones that maintain some kind of editorial review process. We have seen on numerous occasions, an infographic being picked up by other sites as a result of the seed placement on one of the higher end infographic galleries.

Here’s what our respondents thought…

What are the 5 least effective link building tactics?

As you might expect we then rounded up the data from the previous question to give us the “relegation zone� in the league table of linking or the tactics that were considered least effective by our respondents based on their average rating.

I won’t comment on the effectiveness of any individual tactics personally here, but I will say that in certain markets and with certain types of sites these tactics are still working. While we should strive to do better forms of link building undoubtedly (if we want to mature as an industry and get a seat at the big table), we do have to be mindful of what is actively working and look at how we can learn from that.

Which tactics do link builders consider dangerous?

I have to say there are probably other linking tactics that I would consider dangerous and perhaps even more dangerous… but here is how our respondents answered this question:

My immediate reaction to these results was that there was likely a little bit of confirmation bias going on. You are likely to have seen the fairly recent events involving a UK florist and their insatiable appetite for advertorials (whether it was advertorials that caused the spanking or not, this was inferred as the cause everywhere) as well as Google’s relatively public smashing of some blog networks. It isn’t beyond the realms of possibility to argue that some respondents will have taken on board these big industry events and even if just subconsciously they will be finding evidence in their day to day work that these tactics are indeed dangerous.

In reality, it really does come down to how you execute. Any kind of linking tactic comes with risk when not done well.

Fear, uncertainty and doubt are growing problems for link builders

11% said that they weren’t sure which links were going to harm or help them which would corroborate the notion that this is one of the biggest challenges faced by link builders presently but the data from the survey would suggest that for some, the last 12 months has driven them to analysis-paralysis. So much uncertainty, fear and doubt that close to 5% aren’t planning on doing any link building at all.

As I’ve said before, we’re all trying to make our way in Google’s ocean and if you’re not rowing, but your competitors are… standing still starts to look just as risky as being proactive.

What about the next 12 months?

It is clear that the outreach-dependent forms of link building are going to be taking priority for the next 12 months and beyond with respondents planning to focus investment in tactics including guest blogging, digital PR, infographics and building relationships with webmasters.

I find that last one particularly interesting because I think many of us are waking up to the idea that links (certainly some of your links anyway) can drive a good amount of traffic on an ongoing basis. If there is a website that already has an audience (and the trust of that audience) why wouldn’t you explore ways of working with them and developing that relationship? That’s a ready-made set of prospective customers…

And here it is in full format:

I welcome your thoughts and feedback on the data – I will try to respond to all comments promptly.
Please also feel free to suggest questions for inclusion in next year’s survey.


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How Failure Can Make You a Better SEO

Posted by HappyBrooke

This post was originally in YouMoz, and was promoted to the main blog because it provides great value and interest to our community. The author’s views are entirely his or her own and may not reflect the views of Moz, Inc.

It’s been three months since the good Mozzers allowed my SEO from a Newb’s Perspective to see the light of day, and I’m back for another round. Except now HappyBrooke has had a dose of reality.

That’s right — I’ve hit some potholes. And I found out that Brooke’s list of essential qualities SEO pros need (which I listed in the last post), though it didn’t claim to be comprehensive, lacked one: the ability to be resilient. Props to Heather Baker for noting this in the comments. In this post, I’ll share my fledgling thoughts on how to cultivate resilience in the face of failure. As Heather pointed out, if you want to do SEO well, you’ve gotta be resilient.

My friends who are, like me, “newbs” to SEO will probably find my epiphanies more helpful than those of you who are old hat. But no doubt veterans have developed strategies on how to stay resilient in your daily battles to rank. If you’re willing to share your strategies with me in the comments below, I’d be tickled.

Why SEO is a bumpy ride

As you and I both know, SEO done right can pay off in tremendous ways for our clients: through website traffic, conversions, brand awareness, loyalty, and retention (just to name a few perks that come from online marketing success). If you can rank, you can reap the benefits.

But there are no guarantees.

In my first four months on the job as an SEO, I’ve not experienced a major Earth-shifting Google algorithm update (yet), but I have experienced the daily joys and challenges of our field. You all know how it goes.

Since starting my job at Happy Dog, this has all happened to me:

  • I gained clients, and I lost a client.
  • I created content people liked, and I created content nobody gave a rip about.
  • I watched rankings skyrocket, and I watched rankings drop it like it’s hot.

Boy-oh-boy am I realizing that to do SEO, you need a healthy dose of Dory’s “just keep swimming� resilience at times.

Credit: Tumblr

Watching the analytics and the SERPs, just waiting for traffic and rankings, feels awfully like trying to get a fire going at a summer night’s bonfire (without the fun of hot dogs and s’mores). You stare into the flames and wait for a spark. Add another log. The fire dies down. You shiver. You frantically run to find twigs. Finally: a tiny blaze! Hallelujah! Then suddenly, a major gust of wind blows it out. Nooooooo!

I don’t know about you, but my emotions follow a pretty specific pattern when I’m idling in no-rank-land. First, I’m frustrated. My client has a great business. He/she deserves better rankings. But then I feel a sense of entitlement: I’m putting in the hours, so it’s maddening that my work isn’t paying off. I feel desperate. My client is paying me to achieve results. Am I a failure? Stricken with grief, I eat candy bars and slump in my desk chair drinking straight from the coffee pot.

What comes next? Well, I’m hired to help our clients optimize their web presence. I’m expected to drive traffic — my clients will not twiddle their thumbs and wait patiently. The pressure’s on. What am I going to do?

The eventual outcome of this whole emotional journey is that I get a grip (finally) and muster up whatever resilience I have. Then here’s what I’m learning to do: to take a marker to the good ol’ proverbial drawing board to see what can be done. This moment, my friends, is the essence of what we do in SEO.

It’s not easy being creative

The reason SEO is so challenging/exhilarating/frustrating/tiring/overwhelming is that, as many experts have already pointed out, there’s no secret formula to earn links, start ranking, and succeed at search engine marketing. There are literally as many ways as your creative mind can dream up, which means you could see astounding results if you climb out on a limb or you could see no results at all and completely, totally flop.

There’s a risk to every creative endeavor we undertake. When we do it on behalf of someone else, the risk increases. In the face of all this pressure, we have to learn how to embody resilience — every day, every hour, every minute, no matter what the analytics are saying.

I’m learning that just because I try a tactic and it doesn’t work, that doesn’t mean I have failed. I’m going to be honest for a minute and shed some light on three of my “failures� in the hopes that you will a) realize you’re not alone, and b) get some ideas of how to move forward.

Brooke’s SEO Blunders

I’m still learning Photoshop. Please don’t judge.

1. Nobody wanted my content

Problem: I spent hours pouring research and creativity into blog posts for a client and then pitching them to appropriate platforms. For weeks, nobody bit.

What I did next: Tweaked the ideas, made tiny edits, and re-pitched the content. People were unimpressed, so I created more content with gusto. Then I set aside the content nobody wanted for the time being and revisited it when I’d had a little space to see if I had any new ideas to improve it. Turns out, I did.

Reality check: Failing to attract an audience’s attention is an age-old dilemma for artists (which we are). Hey, if there’s anything I learned from my college creative writing classes, it’s that if you expect a standing ovation for everything you write, get ready to be disappointed, hon. Plenty of writers spent years writing and pitching tomes that nobody wanted to publish (poor Jack Kerouac had On the Road done in three weeks, or so he claimed, but it took the guy years to find a publisher). Unless you’re already a smashing success, you’re not entitled to anybody’s attention.

How to stay resilient: Learn from the rejection and tweak your overall strategy. Was the content too shallow or too technical? Did you choose an angle or approach that didn’t jam with your audience? Was the platform you chose to publish on the wrong fit for the content? Try something new next time. Don’t fret. You can’t hit it out of the ballpark every time.

2. I lost a client

Problem: All throughout the first few months of their campaign, my client seemed wishy-washy, always about to give up. I played cheerleader on every phone call and email, promising that the rankings for their brand-new, beautiful site were going to improve. But the client, waiting for the leads to roll in, was getting antsy. Just as things were getting exciting on the SEO-side, they bailed.

What I did next: My boss and I did a “What went wrong?� analysis, and we affirmed that the campaign had been solid. The rankings had been slow to come by, but forecasting a month or two down the road, we saw that things were looking up. However, we realized how important it is to check in with our clients and make sure they are happy — this client had had questions but never raised them with us. This experience made us resolve to check in more often and create that opportunity to talk about our clients’ concerns.

Reality check: Even if you perform high-quality work, clients often expect to get leads and see results in a shorter time period than it may take to achieve them. It is important to clearly articulate to your clients that in SEO, “slow and steady wins the race.� In our case, we should have communicated more with our client and made sure they did not have unrealistic expectations of us.

How to stay resilient: If you do a good job but still lose the client, don’t hang your head in shame. The thing is, there will always (or at least often) be a better strategy you could have used. Losing a client can be an opportunity to reflect on how well your strategy worked. With SEO, even the best strategies take time, and you can’t force your clients to be patient. All you can do is focus on providing the best quality SEO services that you can.

3. I couldn’t figure out how to market a client in a boring, “blah� industry

Problem: The day they called to request SEO services, I couldn’t even wrap my head around their product. Wait, so what do you guys do again?

What I did next: I changed their entire keyword strategy three times, didn’t sleep, and tossed idea after idea out the window. Honestly, this was a tough one. One thing that helped (at my client’s suggestion) was having learning sessions with them on the benefit their product provides. When I started to grasp that, it was easier to drum up ideas (I’m still drumming).

Reality check: Not every client will be easy to market. Some industries are just doozies.

How to stay resilient: Nick Stagg from Lemonpromotions brought up a great question in the comments on my first post: “How do you make a plumber sound sexy?� How, indeed? There are probably hundreds of ways to go about it. Overall, I think promoting the plumber will involve four steps:

  1. Understanding the unique value the plumber provides,
  2. Knowing who needs his/her services,
  3. Succinctly articulating his/her value, and
  4. Creatively sharing it.
As marketers, these are challenges that can inspire and push us. Ultimately, every industry has a need and a purpose, and you can (and will!) find strategies that will work.

Takeaways

If you’re stumped or failing:

  • Talk to your clients. Keep the relationship strong. Share your resilience with them. In no-rank land, they’ll need it, too. Let their enthusiasm for and expertise in their field revitalize you.
  • Try new things. Be adventurous. Experiment with new content or approaches. Sometimes failure propels us out of the box we were stuck in when nothing else can.
  • Give yourself a break. Don’t make yourself miserable by wallowing in continual blame and guilt. Everybody fails! But dwelling on it for too long will prevent you from moving forward.

Whatever you take away from this reflection (I hope it’s not just dissatisfaction at my attempts to provide solutions to common SEO ailments — comment below with your better ideas! I long to hear them!), remember that we’re all still learning how to do this business in an ethical, effective, exciting way. If you fail once, or fail again and again, cultivate resilience. Return to that drawing board. Remember that at the end of the day, your integrity and the connections you make with your clients are the most important things – not your ability to make them rank.

My impression of the SEO community after just a few months of reading blogs and forums is that you people are hungry for the tools and tips to do your jobs better. You don’t want to just do an okay job. You want to succeed, and you want to do it in big, beautiful, bold ways. When you experience discouragement, consider J.K. Rowling’s words in her commencement speech at Harvard back in 2008 (they apply to SEO and to life in general):

“It is impossible to live without failing at something, unless you live so cautiously that you might as well not have lived at all — in which case, you fail by default.�

Fail, but do it resiliently. And get back up. You’ll do better next time.


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