Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Dani Alves yet to decide on Barca future

facebook logo


Image by marcopako 
www.facebook.com


Dani Alves yet to decide on Barca future
Use a Facebook account to add a comment, subject to Facebook"s Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Your Facebook name, photo & other personal information you make public on Facebook will appear with your comment, and may be used on ESPN"s …
Read more on ESPN FC


McDonald"s red? Facebook"s blue? How do brand colors influence customers
Many companies are researching their color choices — to the tune of thousands of dollars — and trademarking the colors consumers have come to associate with their products, such as UPS"s Pullman brown, Home Depot"s vibrant orange and Tiffany & Co.
Read more on OCRegister


President Obama Names David Recordon as Director of White House

David previously served as an Engineering Director at Facebook, and is a widely respected Silicon Valley technologist. At Facebook, he led software engineering teams responsible for company-wide internal productivity tools that enabled staff to create …
Read more on The White House (blog)


Facebook purges "Likes", with pages" fan counts expected to plunge
In the clean-up, Facebook will remove pages that have been deactivated from the number of total likes every page has. Only accounts that have been manually deactivated will be caught up in the deletion, rather than ones that have been deactivated as a …
Read more on The Independent



Dani Alves yet to decide on Barca future

The Power of Persuasion: ABCs of Leveraging Personas for Search Success [#CZLNY]

During his session at ClickZ Live New York, Grant Simmons of Homes.com chatted about the value of personas in achieving search success.
Home – SearchEngineWatch



The Power of Persuasion: ABCs of Leveraging Personas for Search Success [#CZLNY]

Spam Score: Moz"s New Metric to Measure Penalization Risk

Posted by randfish


Today, I’m very excited to announce that Moz’s Spam Score, an R&D project we’ve worked on for nearly a year, is finally going live. In this post, you can learn more about how we’re calculating spam score, what it means, and how you can potentially use it in your SEO work.



How does Spam Score work?


Over the last year, our data science team, led by  Dr. Matt Peters, examined a great number of potential factors that predicted that a site might be penalized or banned by Google. We found strong correlations with 17 unique factors we call “spam flags,” and turned them into a score.


Almost every subdomain in  Mozscape (our web index) now has a Spam Score attached to it, and this score is viewable inside Open Site Explorer (and soon, the MozBar and other tools). The score is simple; it just records the quantity of spam flags the subdomain triggers. Our correlations showed that no particular flag was more likely than others to mean a domain was penalized/banned in Google, but firing many flags had a very strong correlation (you can see the math below).


Spam Score currently operates only on the subdomain level—we don’t have it for pages or root domains. It’s been my experience and the experience of many other SEOs in the field that a great deal of link spam is tied to the subdomain-level. There are plenty of exceptions—manipulative links can and do live on plenty of high-quality sites—but as we’ve tested, we found that subdomain-level Spam Score was the best solution we could create at web scale. It does a solid job with the most obvious, nastiest spam, and a decent job highlighting risk in other areas, too.


How to access Spam Score


Right now, you can find Spam Score inside  Open Site Explorer, both in the top metrics (just below domain/page authority) and in its own tab labeled “Spam Analysis.” Spam Score is only available for Pro subscribers right now, though in the future, we may make the score in the metrics section available to everyone (if you’re not a subscriber, you can check it out with a free trial). 



The current Spam Analysis page includes a list of subdomains or pages linking to your site. You can toggle the target to look at all links to a given subdomain on your site, given pages, or the entire root domain. You can further toggle source tier to look at the Spam Score for incoming linking pages or subdomains (but in the case of pages, we’re still showing the Spam Score for the subdomain on which that page is hosted).


You can click on any Spam Score row and see the details about which flags were triggered. We’ll bring you to a page like this:



Back on the original Spam Analysis page, at the very bottom of the rows, you’ll find an option to export a disavow file, which is compatible with Google Webmaster Tools. You can choose to filter the file to contain only those sites with a given spam flag count or higher:



Disavow exports usually take less than 3 hours to finish. We can send you an email when it’s ready, too.


WARNING: Please do not export this file and simply upload it to Google! You can really, really hurt your site’s ranking and there may be no way to recover. Instead, carefully sort through the links therein and make sure you really do want to disavow what’s in there. You can easily remove/edit the file to take out links you feel are not spam. When Moz’s Cyrus Shepard disavowed every link to his own site, it took more than a year for his rankings to return!


We’ve actually made the file not-wholly-ready for upload to Google in order to be sure folks aren’t too cavalier with this particular step. You’ll need to open it up and make some edits (specifically to lines at the top of the file) in order to ready it for Webmaster Tools


In the near future, we hope to have Spam Score in the Mozbar as well, which might look like this: 



Sweet, right? :-)


Potential use cases for Spam Analysis


This list probably isn’t exhaustive, but these are a few of the ways we’ve been playing around with the data:


  1. Checking for spammy links to your own site: Almost every site has at least a few bad links pointing to it, but it’s been hard to know how much or how many potentially harmful links you might have until now. Run a quick spam analysis and see if there’s enough there to cause concern.

  2. Evaluating potential links: This is a big one where we think Spam Score can be helpful. It’s not going to catch every potentially bad link, and you should certainly still use your brain for evaluation too, but as you’re scanning a list of link opportunities or surfing to various sites, having the ability to see if they fire a lot of flags is a great warning sign.

  3. Link cleanup: Link cleanup projects can be messy, involved, precarious, and massively tedious. Spam Score might not catch everything, but sorting links by it can be hugely helpful in identifying potentially nasty stuff, and filtering out the more probably clean links.

  4. Disavow Files: Again, because Spam Score won’t perfectly catch everything, you will likely need to do some additional work here (especially if the site you’re working on has done some link buying on more generally trustworthy domains), but it can save you a heap of time evaluating and listing the worst and most obvious junk.

Over time, we’re also excited about using Spam Score to help improve the PA and DA calculations (it’s not currently in there), as well as adding it to other tools and data sources. We’d love your feedback and insight about where you’d most want to see Spam Score get involved.


Details about Spam Score’s calculation


This section comes courtesy of Moz’s head of data science, Dr. Matt Peters, who created the metric and deserves (at least in my humble opinion) a big round of applause. – Rand


Definition of “spam”


Before diving into the details of the individual spam flags and their calculation, it’s important to first describe our data gathering process and “spam” definition.


For our purposes, we followed Google’s definition of spam and gathered labels for a large number of sites as follows.


  • First, we randomly selected a large number of subdomains from the Mozscape index stratified by mozRank.

  • Then we crawled the subdomains and threw out any that didn’t return a “200 OK” (redirects, errors, etc).

  • Finally, we collected the top 10 de-personalized, geo-agnostic Google-US search results using the full subdomain name as the keyword and checked whether any of those results matched the original keyword. If they did not, we called the subdomain “spam,” otherwise we called it “ham.”

We performed the most recent data collection in November 2014 (after the Penguin 3.0 update) for about 500,000 subdomains.


Relationship between number of flags and spam


The overall Spam Score is currently an aggregate of 17 different “flags.” You can think of each flag a potential “warning sign” that signals that a site may be spammy. The overall likelihood of spam increases as a site accumulates more and more flags, so that the total number of flags is a strong predictor of spam. Accordingly, the flags are designed to be used together—no single flag, or even a few flags, is cause for concern (and indeed most sites will trigger at least a few flags).


The following table shows the relationship between the number of flags and percent of sites with those flags that we found Google had penalized or banned:



ABOVE: The overall probability of spam vs. the number of spam flags. Data collected in Nov. 2014 for approximately 500K subdomains. The table also highlights the three overall danger levels: low/green (< 10%) moderate/yellow (10-50%) and high/red (>50%)


The overall spam percent averaged across a large number of sites increases in lock step with the number of flags; however there are outliers in every category. For example, there are a small number of sites with very few flags that are tagged as spam by Google and conversely a small number of sites with many flags that are not spam.


Spam flag details


The individual spam flags capture a wide range of spam signals link profiles, anchor text, on page signals and properties of the domain name. At a high level the process to determine the spam flags for each subdomain is:


  • Collect link metrics from Mozscape (mozRank, mozTrust, number of linking domains, etc).

  • Collect anchor text metrics from Mozscape (top anchor text phrases sorted by number of links)

  • Collect the top five pages by Page Authority on the subdomain from Mozscape

  • Crawl the top five pages plus the home page and process to extract on page signals

  • Provide the output for Mozscape to include in the next index release cycle

Since the spam flags are incorporated into in the Mozscape index, fresh data is released with each new index. Right now, we crawl and process the spam flags for each subdomains every two – three months although this may change in the future.


Link flags


The following table lists the link and anchor text related flags with the the odds ratio for each flag. For each flag, we can compute two percents: the percent of sites with that flag that are penalized by Google and the percent of sites with that flag that were not penalized. The odds ratio is the ratio of these percents and gives the increase in likelihood that a site is spam if it has the flag. For example, the first row says that a site with this flag is 12.4 times more likely to be spam than one without the flag.



ABOVE: Description and odds ratio of link and anchor text related spam flags. In addition to a description, it lists the odds ratio for each flag which gives the overall increase in spam likelihood if the flag is present).


Working down the table, the flags are:


  • Low mozTrust to mozRank ratio: Sites with low mozTrust compared to mozRank are likely to be spam.

  • Large site with few links: Large sites with many pages tend to also have many links and large sites without a corresponding large number of links are likely to be spam.

  • Site link diversity is low: If a large percentage of links to a site are from a few domains it is likely to be spam.

  • Ratio of followed to nofollowed subdomains/domains (two separate flags): Sites with a large number of followed links relative to nofollowed are likely to be spam.

  • Small proportion of branded links (anchor text): Organically occurring links tend to contain a disproportionate amount of banded keywords. If a site does not have a lot of branded anchor text, it’s a signal the links are not organic.

On-page flags


Similar to the link flags, the following table lists the on page and domain name related flags:



ABOVE: Description and odds ratio of on page and domain name related spam flags. In addition to a description, it lists the odds ratio for each flag which gives the overall increase in spam likelihood if the flag is present).


  • Thin content: If a site has a relatively small ratio of content to navigation chrome it’s likely to be spam.

  • Site mark-up is abnormally small: Non-spam sites tend to invest in rich user experiences with CSS, Javascript and extensive mark-up. Accordingly, a large ratio of text to mark-up is a spam signal.

  • Large number of external links: A site with a large number of external links may look spammy.

  • Low number of internal links: Real sites tend to link heavily to themselves via internal navigation and a relative lack of internal links is a spam signal.

  • Anchor text-heavy page: Sites with a lot of anchor text are more likely to be spam then those with more content and less links.

  • External links in navigation: Spam sites may hide external links in the sidebar or footer.

  • No contact info: Real sites prominently display their social and other contact information.

  • Low number of pages found: A site with only one or a few pages is more likely to be spam than one with many pages.

  • TLD correlated with spam domains: Certain TLDs are more spammy than others (e.g. pw).

  • Domain name length: A long subdomain name like “bycheapviagra.freeshipping.onlinepharmacy.com” may indicate keyword stuffing.

  • Domain name contains numerals: domain names with numerals may be automatically generated and therefore spam.

If you’d like some more details on the technical aspects of the spam score, check out the  video of Matt’s 2012 MozCon talk about Algorithmic Spam Detection or the slides (many of the details have evolved, but the overall ideas are the same):


We’d love your feedback


As with all metrics, Spam Score won’t be perfect. We’d love to hear your feedback and ideas for improving the score as well as what you’d like to see from it’s in-product application in the future. Feel free to leave comments on this post, or to email Matt (matt at moz dot com) and me (rand at moz dot com) privately with any suggestions.


Good luck cleaning up and preventing link spam!



Not a Pro Subscriber? No problem!





Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don’t have time to hunt down but want to read!



Moz Blog



Spam Score: Moz"s New Metric to Measure Penalization Risk

Monday, March 30, 2015

Latest Twitter News

Cut Through the Noise on Twitter with TweetDeck"s Engagement Filter
With 500 million tweets sent into the ether every day, it can be difficult to sort the wheat from the chaff on Twitter. This is one of the areas where power-user-tool-of-choice TweetDeck can lend a hand. It includes an engagement filter to let you …
Read more on Gizmodo


Meerkat vs. Periscope: Twitter"s new app set to dominate growing mobile live
Since launching late last week, Twitter"s new mobile live streaming app, Periscope, has exploded in popularity, and has been used by celebrities such as Aaron Paul, Seth Meyers and even Kevin Jonas, leading many to question how long a competing service …
Read more on Financial Post


Dallas Cowboys" Twitter mailbag, Part 2

@toddarcher Do you see any chance of Adrian Peterson coming to Dallas, and if so at what expense? #cowboysmail. — Kendrick (@__AceOfSpades_) March 26, 2015 · @toddarcher: When you are around the Cowboys you learn to never rule anything out, …
Read more on ESPN (blog)



Latest Twitter News

Sunday, March 29, 2015

Today"s Social Media News

Social Media Iceberg


Image by Intersection Consulting
www.intersectionconsulting.comSocial media tactics are merely the tip of the iceberg.


Volvo Ocean Race – Dongfeng Race Team – Back in the mix
Volvo Ocean Race – Today, in OC Sport"s office the Dongfeng Race Team shore team received the latest position report. Dongfeng, who most likely through determination, smart navigation and no doubt a little luck, have managed to gain 24 miles in three …
Read more on Sail World (press release)


Anti-social media is causing our young children to turn anorexic and self-harm
Boring things, statistics. But sometimes the figures are so bleak, so damning that you have to face up to reality. I was shocked to read that primary school children as young as seven are seeking help for self harm, suicidal thoughts and psychological …
Read more on mirror.co.uk


Panelists debate social justice implications of Michael Brown shooting
The media painted Brown as a “thug,” which is not a “race-neutral” term, Rose said, adding that the media also “disaggregated” the story by not mentioning the economic burdens blacks face due to race. “This kind of disaggregation of the story into a …
Read more on The Brown Daily Herald


The Israeli Left and Its Captive Media Get Clobbered
By the morning after the election the entire media Titanic had sunk beneath the waves, after striking the iceberg of reality. It turns out that Israelis ignored the media seeking to “educate” … So here we have the spectacle of the same Leftists who …
Read more on FrontPage Magazine



Today"s Social Media News

A Sneak Preview of #MozCon 2015

Posted by EricaMcGillivray


Considering coming to MozCon, July 13-15 in Seattle this year? Maybe you’re on the fence because you’re not sure what’s going on, and most importantly, what our amazing speakers are talking about? I hear you, MozCon fans! While the agenda is still being finalized, we wanted to give you a sneak preview.


If you’re like “oh, shit, I forgot to buy my MozCon ticket!,” do so now:


Buy your ticket!


We’re still finalizing a couple more speakers and topics, and of course, community speakers submissions are fast approaching. Keep your eye out here on April 2nd for more info!





















































Adam Singer
Analytics Advocate at Google
@AdamSinger

Adam Singer is Analytics Advocate at Google, startup adviser, investor, and blogger. He previously was director for a global consulting team and has provided digital strategy for brands in a variety of industries including marketing, technology, healthcare, and more.


Topic: Digital Analytics: People, Process, Platform
In a data-driven world, Adam will pull you back to think again about your analytics, best practices, and how you report.



Adam Singer




Cindy Krum
Founder and CEO at MobileMoxie LLC.
Twitter: @Suzzicks

Cindy Krum is the CEO and Founder of MobileMoxie, LLC, and author of Mobile Marketing: Finding Your Customers No Matter Where They Are. She brings fresh and creative ideas to her clients, and regularly speaks at US and international digital marketing events.


Topic: Become a Mobile SEO Superhero
With Google’s algorithm mobile change, Cindy will walk you through the changes, what they mean for your site and its rankings, and what you should be focusing on going forward.



Cindy Krum




Courtney Seiter
Head of Content Marketing at Buffer
Twitter: @courtneyseiter

Courtney Seiter examines social media and workplace culture at Buffer, and her writing has been published at TIME, Fast Company, Lifehacker, Inc., and more. She lives in Nashville, where she is a founder of Girls to the Moon, a leadership camp for girls.


Topic: The Psychology of Social Media
Courtney dives into the science of why people post, share, and build relationships on social media and how to create an even more irresistible social media experience for your audience.



Courtney Seiter




Dana DiTomaso
Partner at Kick Point Inc
Twitter: @danaditomaso

Whether at a conference, on the radio, or in a meeting, Dana DiTomaso likes to impart wisdom to help you turn a lot of marketing bullshit into real strategies to grow your business. Dana is also a fan of the random fact. Kick Point often celebrates “Watershed Wednesday” because of her diverse work and education background. In her spare time, Dana drinks tea and yells at the Hamilton Tiger-Cats.


Topic: How to Make Your Marketing Match Your Reality
Too often, the tone and promises of marketing don’t match those of the business itself. Dana will help you bring your brand identity together, both in-store and online.



Dana DiTomaso




David Mihm
Director of Local Search Strategy at Moz
Twitter: @davidmihm

David Mihm has created and promoted search-friendly websites for clients of all sizes since the early 2000’s. David co-founded GetListed.org, which he sold to Moz in November 2012. He now serves as Moz’s Director of Local Search Strategy.


Topic: Astoundingly Useful Applications of Facebook Search for Marketers
Facebook has long neglected its potential as a local search giant, and as a result, its Graph Search product is an afterthought for too many marketers. David showcases Graph-powered insights for small-business marketers—with utility well beyond Facebook.



David Mihm




Joanna Wiebe
Creator at Copy Hackers
Twitter: @copyhackers

The original conversion copywriter, Joanna Wiebe is the cofounder of Snap and Copy Hackers, where startups learn to convert like mofos. She is a natural-born thief who steals messages from the mouths of customers and turns their words into higher-converting copy.


Topic: Sinners Are Winners: How Messaging Your Prospect’s Darkest Desires Can Boost Engagement
Playing it too safe? Joanna will show you how to tap into your prospects’ secret wishes in your copy—and use bold messages your competitors wouldn’t dare use.



Joanna Wiebe




Kristina Halvorson
Founder at Brain Traffic
Twitter: @halvorson

Kristina Halvorson is widely recognized as one of the most important voices in content strategy. She is the founder of Brain Traffic, the coauthor of Content Strategy for the Web, and the founder of the Confab content strategy conferences.


Topic: How To Do Content Strategy (Probably)
Put 10 people in a room and ask them to define “content strategy,” and you’ll likely get 10 different answers. Kristina will share her own tried-and-true approach!



Kristina Halvorson




Lexi Mills
Head of Digital at Dynamo PR
Twitter: @leximills

Lexi Mills is a PR SEO specialist, with over eight years experience working with both small firms and big brands. She has designed and implemented integrated PR, SEO, content, and social campaigns in the UK, Europe, and USA for B2B and B2C clients.


Topic: Marketing Innovations: Creative PR, Content, and SEO Strategies
Lexi shows you how to apply strategies used in emerging markets to grow the success of your PR, SEO, and content work from bathrooms to rock bands.



Lexi Mills




Marshall Simmonds
Founder and CEO at Define Media Group, Inc.
Twitter: @mdsimmonds

Marshall Simmonds is the Founder of Define Media Group, the enterprise audience development company specializing in strategic search and social marketing. Define works with many of the most influential brands and networks in the world.


Topic: Dark Search and Social—Run Rabbit Run!
With data from 112 publishers with 164+ billion page views, Marshall will dive into the challenges of tracking social and search campaigns. He’ll focus on history’s lessons and what’s happening with direct and mobile traffic in an app-heavy world.



Marshall Simmonds




Marta Turek
Senior Digital Marketing Programs Manager at ROI·DNA
Twitter: @MTurek

Marta holds seven years of experience in digital advertising, specializing in lead generation, and paid search marketing. Developing digital strategies and telling stories through data is what rocks her boat.


Topic: Too Busy to Do Good Work
Don’t let your work suffer from being busy. Instead, let Marta show you the tactics to clean up your PPC processes to finally get more strategic.



Marta Turek




Matthew Brown
Head of Special Projects at Moz
Twitter: @MatthewJBrown

Matthew runs Special Projects at Moz. This has been going on for two years, and we’re still not totally sure what that means.


Topic: An SEO’s Guide to the Insane World of Content
Find yourself arguing whether or not SEO is just great content? Matthew will talk through a strategic and tactical journey of content strategy from an SEO’s viewpoint and leave you with new tools and tactics.



Matthew Brown




Mig Reyes
Designer at Basecamp
Twitter: @migreyes

Mig Reyes is a traditionally trained graphic designer who escaped advertising agency life, cut his teeth at the T-shirt powerhouse known as Threadless, and now helps lead branding, marketing and even a bit of product work at Basecamp.


Topic title TBD, but Mig will be focusing on putting your creative energies into your marketing.



Mig Reyes




Pete Meyers
Marketing Scientist at Moz
Twitter: @dr_pete

Dr. Pete Meyers is Marketing Scientist for Moz, where he works on product research and data-driven content. He has spent the past three years building research tools to monitor Google, including the MozCast project, and he curates the Google Algorithm History.


Topic: Surviving Google: SEO in 2020
Organic results are disappearing, replaced by Knowledge Graph, direct answers, new ad hybrids, and more. How can SEOs be ready for Google in five years?



Pete Meyers




Purna Virji
Founder and CEO of  Purview Marketing
Twitter:  @purnavirji

Purna is the founder and CEO of Purview Marketing, a boutique consulting firm helping companies of all sizes grow via search and content marketing. Purna is an avid traveler and speaks six languages (and can swear in 17!).


Topic: How to Better Sell SEO to the C-Suite
Whether you need more resources, trust, or buy-in, Purna will share practical tips for focusing on Profit & Loss and better communicating SEO planning, forecasting, and strategizing.



Purna Virji




Rand Fishkin
Founder at Moz
Twitter: @randfish

Husband of Geraldine. Founder of Moz. Presenter of Whiteboard Friday. Writer of blog posts. Sender of tweets.


Topic: Onsite SEO in 2015: An Elegant Weapon for a More Civilized Marketer
SEO has come full circle as on-page SEO has returned to the forefront. Rand will share how and why on-site SEO is so important and show off uncommon tactics with powerful potential.



Rand Fishkin




Richard Millington
Founder at FeverBee
Twitter: @RichMillington

Richard is the Founder of FeverBee, a community consultancy, and the author of Buzzing Communities.


Topic: Reaching Critical Mass: 150 Active Members
Imagine you could create and rejuvenate a successful community whenever you like? Richard Millington will take you through a step by step action plan to reach critical mass.



Richard Millington




Wil Reynolds
Director of Strategy at Seer Interactive
Twitter: @wilreynolds

Wil Reynolds founded Seer with a focus on doing great things for its clients, team, and the community. His passion for driving and analyzing the impact that a site’s traffic has on the company’s bottom line has shaped SEO and digital marketing industries. Wil also actively supports the Covenant House.


Topic: The Time to Do the Web Right Is Incredibly Short
In “web time,” competitive advantage can be lost in an instant, speed matters. Wil shares how keep on the pulse of competitor agility and how to get things done to stay ahead of them.



Wil Reynolds



In addition to fabulous days full of great content from extraordinary minds, we’re also cooking up three nights of great fun, networking, and MozCon love. Monday night, our partners will be hosting a pub crawl in Seattle’s Belltown neighborhood with special prizes for those who hit every spot. Tuesday night, we’re doing a networking event, featuring you, the community, and your passions besides marketing. Details to come as they’re finalized! And finally, Wednesday night, we’ll say ‘see you next year’ with our traditional party at the Garage: karaoke, bowling, pool, and chilling with friends.


Questions about MozCon? I’m happy to answer them in the comments.


See you at MozCon, friends!


Buy your ticket!


Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don’t have time to hunt down but want to read!



Moz Blog



A Sneak Preview of #MozCon 2015

Are You #Winning at Google Shopping Campaigns?

If you’re down for a little spring cleaning this season, something you could be optimizing right now are your Google Shopping Campaigns.
Home – SearchEngineWatch



Are You #Winning at Google Shopping Campaigns?

Saturday, March 28, 2015

Pinterest Joins Twitter And Dropbox By Releasing Its First Full-Year ...

Pinterest Joins Twitter And Dropbox By Releasing Its First Full-Year

With Pinterest"s new funding round behind it, the popular image-bookmarking site is continuing to make strides in the Internet space as the de facto digital pinboard site. Stepping in line with other online services like Dropbox and Twitter, Pinterest …
Read more on Tech Times


SXSW: Pinterest: We"re Not "Social Media"…And We Don"t Pay For Advertising

That point was so important to Pinterest Head of Brand David Rubin that he said it twice for emphasis. “Pinterest is not social media,” he said at his session today recounting how the not-social network grew to 70 million users and 30 billion pins in …
Read more on MediaPost Communications


Quartz Daily Brief—Israel"s election, Apple"s TV plans, Pinterest"s valuation

The US Federal Reserve convenes. The central bank"s two-day meeting will conclude with an official announcement Wednesday. The key question: will the Fed finally bump up rates (paywall)? J Sainsbury reports more grim supermarket sales. Big UK …
Read more on Quartz



Pinterest Joins Twitter And Dropbox By Releasing Its First Full-Year ...

Friday, March 27, 2015

5 Tips to Make Your Marketing Stand Out Like a Purple Cow [#SESMiami]

In the spirit of Seth Godin’s principle that good marketing should stand out like a purple cow, marketers from Home Depot and the Miami Marlins baseball team shared their insights on how to make your marketing “purple.”
Home – SearchEngineWatch



5 Tips to Make Your Marketing Stand Out Like a Purple Cow [#SESMiami]

What Does an SEO Do In Their Day-to-Day Work - Whiteboard Friday

Posted by randfish


There’s a common misconception that SEO is a “one and done” task — that you clean up and optimize a site, and once that’s done, you can focus your efforts elsewhere. There’s so much more to the day-to-day work of an SEO, though, and in today’s Whiteboard Friday, Rand walks us through those ongoing parts of the job.





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


What Does and SEO do in Their Day-to-Day Work board


Video Transcription



Howdy, Moz fans, and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week I want to tackle a question I get sometimes about the day-to-day activities of an SEO and what should you do after you’ve completed that first site audit, sort of fixed the problems, what does the day-to-day work look like?


A lot of SEOs, especially those coming from consulting backgrounds or who’ve joined companies as in-house SEOs who’ve had kind of this big project based SEO work to do, find themselves struggling after that’s done. Typically, that process is pretty straightforward. You kind of do an audit. You look at all the things on the site. You figure out what’s wrong, what’s missing, where are opportunities that we could execute on. Maybe you do some competitive analysis, some market analysis. You identify those fixes. You work with teams to make those changes, validate the results have been completed, and then you’re sort of in this, “Well, do I go back and audit again and try to iterate and improve again?”


That doesn’t feel quite right, but it also doesn’t necessarily feel quite right to go to the very, very old-school SEO model of like, “All right, we’ve got these keywords we’re trying to rank for. Let’s optimize our content, get some links, check our rankings for them, and then try to rinse and repeat and keep improving.” This model’s pretty broken I’d say and just not reflective of the reality of opportunities that are in SEO or the reality of the tactics that work today.


So the way that I like to think about this is the SEO audit, an SEO focused audit — which is trying to say, “What traffic could we get? What’s missing? What’s broken and wrong?” — only works at the low level and the very tactical trenches of a marketing process or a business process. What you really need to do is you want to be more incrementally based, but you need to be informed by and you need to be evolving your tactics and your work based on what is the business need right now.


So this process is about saying, “What are the top level company and marketing goals overall? For everyone in the company, what are we trying to accomplish this year, this quarter, the next three year plan? What are we trying to achieve?” Then figure out areas where SEO can best contribute to that work, and then from there you’re creating tactical lists of projects that maybe you’re going to positively move the right needles, the ones that you’ve identified, and then you’re going to evaluate and prioritize which ones you want to implement first, second, and third in what order, and test implement those.


So, hey we’ve figured out that we think that a new blog section for this particular piece of content, or we think that getting some user generated content, building up some community around this section would be terrific, or we think outreach to these kinds of publications or building up our social stats in these worlds will expose us to the right people who can earn us the amplification we’ll need to rank better, etc., etc. Okay, this is a fine process, and you’re going to want to do this, I would say, at least annually and maybe even think about it quarterly.


All this work is essentially centered on a customer profile universe, a universe of people. I’ve got my person X, Y, and Z here, but your customer universe may involve many different personas. It may involve just one type of person you’re targeting that you’re always trying to reach over and over again, but it probably involves also the people who influence that direct subsection of your market.


From there, you can take the, “Hey, you know what, person Z is really interested in and consumes and searches for these types of content topics and these kinds of keywords, so we’re going to start by taking keyword set A or content set A and figure out our keyword list and our content list. We’re going to create, launch, and promote work that supports that.” It could be content pieces, could be video, could be some combination of those things in social media, all forms of content. It could be tools, whatever you want, an application.


We’re going to launch that, promote it, and then work on some amplification, and then we’re going to measure and learn, which is a critical part of that process. I want to not only see what are my results, but what can I learn from what we just did and hopefully I’ll get better and better at iterating on this process. This process will work iteratively, kind of similar to our broken process over here or to our site audit process there. It will work iteratively, and then every now and then you should pop back up and go, “Hey, you know what, I feel like we’ve exhausted the easiest 80% of value that we’re going to get from 20% of the work on keyword set A. Let’s move on and go visit keyword set B now, and then let’s go visit content set C.”


Occasionally, you’re even going to want to move one step up and say, “Hey, you know what, maybe our personas or our market is changing a little bit. We want to try targeting some new customers. We’re going to look at these folks over here or this guy over here and see if we can reach them and their influencers with new kinds of content and topics and keywords, and that sort of thing.”


If your site is rocking and rolling, if you’ve completed your audit, things are just smooth sailing, then this kind of a process is going to work much better, so long as it’s tied to real business objectives. Then when you achieve results here, you can point back to, “Hey, remember I told you these are the areas SEO can contribute to our overall goals, and now I can connect these up directly. The metrics that I get from all this SEO stuff can tie directly to those areas, can tie directly to the business goals.” Everyone from the CEO on down is going to love what you’re doing for the company.


All right everyone, I hope you’ll join me again next week for another edition of Whiteboard Friday. Take care.



Video transcription by Speechpad.com


Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don’t have time to hunt down but want to read!



Moz Blog



What Does an SEO Do In Their Day-to-Day Work - Whiteboard Friday

Today"s Google+ News

Google Street View vous amène dans la région reculée de l"Everest (VIDÉO)

Google a dévoilé jeudi un tour virtuel de la région de l"Everest, au Népal, offrant un aperçu de la vie dans l"un des lieux les plus durs et inaccessibles sur terre. Il offre sur Street View des vues du coeur du parc national de Sagarmatha, où des …
Read more on Le Huffington Post Quebec


Google"s new Street View allows viewers to explore Amazon jungle
WATCH: Google has teamed up with the Sustainable Amazon Foundation(FAS) to give armchair explorers a close-up view of the Amazon jungle in Brazil. The system works in the same way as Google"s Street view and was made possible by hikers carrying …
Read more on euronews


Iditablog: Former UAF professor capturing part of Iditarod trail for Google
Google is heading out on the Iditarod Trail this year, at least for a while. John Bailey, a former University of Alaska Fairbanks professor who now works as a program manager for Google Geo Education, is doing a Google Street View “special collect” to …
Read more on Alaska Dispatch News


Taj Mahal among the top searched destinations on Google Street View in Asia
According to the Google Asia Pacific Blog, India"s iconic Taj Mahal, which was published on Street View February 2014, has emerged as one of the most popular Asian places for global virtual travelers. This destination is viewed by people not only in …
Read more on Firstpost



Today"s Google+ News

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Today"s Facebook News

Facebook’s Secret Message to Me


Image by boltron-

Everytime I login, this is what I see. Is that weird?


Secret tactics of successful Army recruiters
The best message to get through to somebody is harsh reality," Morrison said. Recruiters know they"re selling a …. Myron said he had a newly-signedrecruit help set up his center"s social media; she informed him that kids spend far more time on …
Read more on ArmyTimes.com


Is Gravity Falls"s Grunkle Stan "Not What He Seems" ? Disney XD episode
And as the second season of this Disney XD series unspooled, there were Gravity Falls fans who were desperate to learn more about what Grunkle Stan was up to, which is why they decoded each and every secret message that had been stashed in the show"s …
Read more on Huffington Post


Apple Secret Lab Lets Facebook Fine-Tune Apps Before Watch Debut
Bayerische Motoren Werke AG, Facebook Inc., United Continental Holdings Inc. and others have spent weeks at Apple"s headquarters in Cupertino, California, working hands-on with the smartwatch to test and fine-tune applications that will debut alongside …
Read more on Newsmax



Today"s Facebook News

You Can Now Download Video and GIF Apps for Facebook Messenger

You Can Now Download Video and GIF Apps for Facebook Messenger
Searching for new apps for Messenger will be possible from within Messenger, as well. They can also be found and downloaded from the App Store and Google Play. And if you want to reply to a friend"s crazy animation or flashy emoji, but don"t already …
Read more on Yahoo Tech


Watch the videos that TED uses to reset your brain
A cut above run-of-the-mill internet cat videos, the clips were carefully selected by TED from dozens of videos from animation festivals, short films, and commercials throughout the year. The videos helped reset the mood in the room, bridge a topic, or …
Read more on Quartz


Texas A&M Gains Stature Among Top Video Game Design Schools
Since the Master of Science in Visualization program was founded at the College of Architecture in 1989, leading visual effects and animation companies like Industrial Light & Magic, Pixar and DreamWorks have snapped up its graduates. As it turns out, …
Read more on Texas A&M University


The art of video games: From Super Mario Brothers to The Legend of Zelda
Studio Ghibli is one of the most beloved animation studios in the world, the Japanese Disney producing classics adored by adults and children alike. So when it helped to produce a video game, people paid attention. Ni No Kuni (The Second Country) is a …
Read more on CITY A.M.



You Can Now Download Video and GIF Apps for Facebook Messenger