All posts in SEO

How To Ethically Steal Your Competitors Backlink Sources

ethically-steal

I know how it is being stuck at a certain position in the search engines for a keyword and not being able to move up at all, no matter what I do. No matter how many links I build or what kind my website just sits in the same position, losing all the traffic to the guys in front of me. I have a little technique I use to give my websites a boost when they seem to be stuck where they’re at, and it works extremely well.

The tools available today for looking at your websites backlinks are extremely robust and so feature driven you can rank a website using the data from them alone. I’ve used lots of tools for checking backlinks to my websites and there are two that I always end up going back to: Yahoo Site Explorer and Open Site Explorer. Open Site Explorer is much more intuitive and gives all kinds of cool data for links but Yahoo Site Explorer is more comprehensive with a larger data set, so I like to use both and cross reference the data when I can.

image How To Ethically Steal Your Competitors Backlink Sourcesimage1 How To Ethically Steal Your Competitors Backlink Sources

ANYWAY….lets jump into it.

I’m going to use Yahoo Site Explorer to show you how to do this, It’s literally push button simple so don’t worry if your techie skills are lacking. Basically what we’re going to do is look at the inbound links of the top competitors for the target keyword and try to replicate their link profile. That way we have the same links as them on top of any links we’ve built using other methods. People often use Site Explorers to look at their own inbound link data but don’t realize it’s just as powerful for looking at your competitors links so you can copy their link profile and outrank them.

So here’s what we need to do:

1.) Pick a keyword. You need to find a keyword that you want to improve your ranking for. This usually works best for me with a keyword where I’m on the first page but in a lower position. I’m going to target the keyword “Myspace Advertisements” which I currently rank #6 for.

image thumb How To Ethically Steal Your Competitors Backlink Sources

 

2.) Look at the Top 10 Results. Looking at this search engine results page, I’m probably not going to outrank the official MyAds website so we won’t even look at that one. You generally don’t want to target big authority or brand sites like Wikipedia, CNet, TechCrunch, etc. because the link relevancy is likely less of a ranking factor than brand bias.

 

3.) Pick a Website to Reverse Engineer. Pick a website in the top 10 that’s ranking in front of you that isn’t a brand or authority site to reverse engineer. I’m going to go with MySocialMarketing.com because it’s the first result that meets the criteria I outlined above. If there is a specific page ranking make sure you note that page so you can see the inbound links going to the exact page that is ranking.

 

4.) Go to Yahoo Site Explorer. Copy the website that you want to reverse engineer and paste it into the Explore URL box.

image thumb1 How To Ethically Steal Your Competitors Backlink Sources

 

5.) Click on Inlinks and select “Except From This Domain.” Click on the button that says Inlinks and select “Except from this domain” on the dropdown. This is going to show you all of the inbound links in the YSE link graph for the website you entered.

image thumb2 How To Ethically Steal Your Competitors Backlink Sources

 

6.) Find Places to Post Your Link. Look at the results that show up and find websites that you can get a backlink from. If there is no way to leave a comment or backlink, contact the owner of the website and ask if they will link to your website. Give them a good reason to do so like being a more up-to-date or informative resource than the competitor. Just asking and not pointing out how it would add value to their website will hurt your odds.

image thumb3 How To Ethically Steal Your Competitors Backlink Sources

Usually you won’t have to do too much outreach and you’ll find plenty of websites that you can openly leave a backlink on.

Looking at the results for my YSE search there are quite a few places that I can easily leave a link on. YSE generally does a pretty good job of ordering link importance from top to bottom, so start from the top and work your way down.

After checking out a few of the sites I found a blogger blog that allowed me to leave an auto-approved comment with my link and keyword as the anchor text (Myspace Advertising).

image6 How To Ethically Steal Your Competitors Backlink Sources

7.) Wash, Rinse, and Repeat. That’s all there is to finding where your competitors get their backlinks and duplicating their link profile. It’s a SUPER simple process that is surprisingly effective. If you can get inbound links from the same places as the competitor above you why SHOULDN’T you rank higher?

The best part is that if you still don’t move up you can just do this with another competitors website over and over until your website moves up in the search results. There really are no boundaries with this and it will make your website rank better. For some link variation try using the Open Site Explorer mentioned earlier as well – you might find even more link opportunities.

If you have an employee, intern, VA, or anything of that sort this is a great task to delegate to them because of the simplicity. Just have them follow this guide and you’ll be on your way to higher search engine placements.

Ok…I just handed you an exact blueprint for passing up your competitors and getting more traffic. Now…go and actually implement this instead of noting it as a ‘to do” for later. Enjoy and keep me posted on your progress!

Blacklist Your Competitors Out of Google Search Results

google-spam

A recent post on the official Google blog has a lot of webmasters and SEOs in a state of panic and on the edge of their seats awaiting the next big algorithm updates.

Matt Cutts made it clear that Google is making big developments towards fighting problematic spam like content farms and hacked websites. It’s been a tough uphill battle for Google keeping the search quality up with the amount of spam being pushed out every day. These new changes have brought upon some speculation from a specific question Matt answered about reporting spam.

Here are the question and answer that was posted on Hacker News:

Matt,

Can you speak about the possibility for personal domain blacklists for Google accounts? I know giving users the option to remove sites from their own search results is talked about a lot in these HN threads. Is there any talk internally about implementing something like this?

[Matt's reply] We’ve definitely discussed this. Our policy in search quality is not to pre-announce things before they launch. If we offer an experiment along those lines, I’ll be among the first to show up here and let people know about it. icon smile Blacklist Your Competitors Out of Google Search Results

This caught my attention more than the hacked sites and content farm problems. I can see Google attempting to implement something along these lines to let users help fight spam and clean up the SERPs. There’s only one major problem with this approach, it has huge potential for manipulation. If Google gives users that much control over the SERPs, SEOs are going to have a field day black listing every website that ranks in front of them.

Of course Google would make this process seamless and simple otherwise people wouldn’t bother. The second something like this is implemented I can see 100 services popping up in some variation of: “blacklist your competitors on 1,000 different IPs and 10 different countries for $10.” It would be pretty simple to setup a service like this for an extremely low cost. Pay people to click the button or submit the form that throws up the spam flag on your competitors websites over and over again until they’re gone.

It honestly scares me that it might come down to something like this and I hope Google realizes how flawed of an idea giving users that much control is. If they think the spam is bad now, every legitimate and white hat SEO will be out of business before you can say black hat.

Googles Newest Feature: Filter by Reading Level

google-filter

Yep…just like the title suggests – Google’s newest feature lets you filter your search results by the reading level of the content. There are 3 different reading levels to choose from – “basic”, “intermediate”, and “advanced.” The breakdown of my blog is: 62% basic, 37% intermediate, and an extremely impressive 0% advanced.

 Googles Newest Feature: Filter by Reading Level

This could become really interesting if people actually use it. If someone is looking for a basic/beginner explanation of something they can drill down and choose to only view content that’s considered “Basic.” On the flip side of that if they consider themselves highly knowledgeable in the particular area and want more advanced content they can choose to filter it that way as well. Imagine being able to write separate content for both beginners and experts that will bring both groups to your website.

Just for a quick example of how powerful this could turn out to be if you search for “astronomy” you’ll notice the following reading levels:

astronomy example Googles Newest Feature: Filter by Reading Level

Only 3% of the results are considered basic by Googles new filter. Astronomy gets over 100,000 exact match searches a month and I’m willing to bet a lot of them are from beginners trying to learn more. If you ran an astronomy website you could easily create basic-level content and pull huge amounts of traffic because so few people (3%) are writing at the basic level.

Keep this in mind when you’re creating new content – you can dramatically increase your traffic if this new filter gains popularity just by altering the way you write.

SEO is Not Dead

SEO is not dead

I keep hearing how “SEO is dead” which is an interesting observation to me. It’s always from the same group of people that usually tout themselves as something along the lines of “social media experts” or “social media strategists”. They seem to believe that because social media exists, SEO and search is dying…how they’ve collectively come to that conclusion is beyond me.

My first question is, how can social media ever replace search? I can’t seem to grasp the idea of going to twitter or facebook to find banana bread recipes, a local dentist, or anything really. Why would any of these sites even try to step into the ring with Google? It wouldn’t end well for them. There will always be search, social media is not equivalent to search and never will be. Social media is great and has it’s place, but there is no logical way for it to replace search. Yeah, aspects of social media can influence aspects of search, but that in no way shape or form kills SEO.

To say that SEO is dead is to say that search is dead, as long as there is search there will be SEO. The means of optimization and strategy for raising position in the search engines might change but optimization will still be alive and well. I think most of the…well…lets just call them misinformed “social media experts” are referring to current methods of search engine optimization. Sure, link building, PageRank sculpting, keyword density, and all of the buzz words of SEO might mean nothing in the future, but something WILL invariably replace it.

Lets (hypothetically) say that everything we know about SEO goes out the window. In this fantasy land the search engines decide to use social media and create different metrics based on how users interact with a website to decide where it falls in the search engine results page. This could be a number of different things like: the click-through rate of the website whenever it’s posted, the number of likes it receives, the amount of people that tweet it, and anything else a search engine would deem a quality metric. Even in this scenario an opportunity would still exist for webmasters and search engine optimizers to either try to game the system or ethically gain social approval and increase interaction to OPTIMIZE their rankings.

Lets say that if your website has the most number of likes in your niche, it would show up for keywords that are most often mentioned on your fan page in the Google search results. As soon as that ranking metric is discovered there is instantly an ability to optimize. That’s exactly how search engine ranking factors have come to be known, through testing and discovery. This scenario would follow the exact same SEO process used today.

As long as people are searching for what they need when they need it and businesses can make any kind of money from ranking well in the search engines, optimizers will have no lack of work in the near future.

What it comes down to is that search engines use computers to grade, prioritize, and rank websites. As long as there is an algorithm calculating rankings there will always be some form of optimization. Until the day when Google employs the entire human race to sort through every website on the internet, optimization will still exist.

Don’t take my word for it, listen to Matt Cutts:

0 SEO is Not Dead

SEO is still alive and kickin’ and will be into the foreseeable future.

Are Duplicate Content Penalties a Myth?

duplicate-content

Sort of, Let me explain…

I’ve been seeing A LOT of duplicate content questions lately and I want to take a few minutes to debunk any myths, misinformation, and wrong interpretations. First of all, if you aren’t sure what duplicate content is here’s a quick definition:

“Duplicate content is a term used in the field of search engine optimization to describe content that appears on more than one web page, even on different web sites.”

In other words, if you write an article and I aggregate it, or even steal it without any modification that would be considered duplicate content. Also, if I have multiple versions of an article on my website that is also considered duplicate content. Get it?

There’s this myth (and it really is just a myth) that if you have duplicate content on your website it will receive a PENALTY from Google. This is pretty far from the truth. If I post an article on my website that is then indexed into Google and then create a printer friendly version of that article the second copy would be considered duplicate content. Will Google penalize me for that? NO! I don’t understand why people believe this – it just isn’t logical. This is what will happen…the first and original version of the article will be indexed, rank for any keywords it might contain and add to the search engines index. The SECOND copy (printer friendly) will remain OUT of the search engine index.

To sum all that up: If you have 2 version of an article on your website, the original will be indexed and the second one will not. There will NOT be a duplicate content “penalty” they just won’t both be indexed.

If you’re trying to get a website to rank that is just aggregated content from article directories and nothing is unique it’s going to be very difficult. As I said before – you won’t be penalized for using content (unless it’s blatantly stolen and not meant for reuse) but you won’t reap the benefits of having unique, indexed, and fresh content.

That’s all I’ve got.

Quick SEO Tip – Using the Title Tag Correctly

seo

Title tags are far too often neglected when optimizing websites for the search engines. The title tag holds a large amount of weight in regards to on page SEO and the relevance of your site in the search engines (higher relevance = higher placing in the search results).

If you carefully craft your title tags you’ll find optimizing your site to be much easier, and you can get a significant boost in the search engines from writing titles correctly.

If you’re using words in your page titles that are not relevant keywords or keyphrases to your page you’re both wasting the title tag and causing harm to your SEO score. Remember, relevance is key – the more relevant your page is to your keywords the better. By including a page relevant keyword you’ll be showing the search engines the title and page information match up, giving you a higher relevance score (and placing).
I’ll give you a quick example of an excellent title tag and a few poor title tags. Lets say you’re a realtor in Columbus and you want to rank in the search engines for “Columbus Real Estate”. For the sake of this example lets say you’re trying to write a title tag for your home page.

A  few poor choice title tags would be:

  • Home | CbusRealtor.com
  • Find Free Houses in Columbus, Columbus Houses Under $1,000 | CbusRealtor.com

The first title tag is considered poor because it doesn’t describe the page at all, and the second because it’s an innacurate and misleading description of the page.

An excellent title tag for this page would be:

  • Columbus Real Estate | CbusRealtor.com

The title accurately describes the page and the website in general. The closer your keyword is to the beginning of the title, the better your SEO score will be.

It’s night and day what a well written title tag can do for your website optimization, fix yours now!

Top 5 WordPress SEO Plugins

The all time best WordPress plugins for SEO

Optimizing your website for the search engines can be a daunting task. Many people aren’t sure where to begin and just get frustrated or overwhelmed before they even start. I use the following 5 plugins on my blog for SEO purposes and they all work GREAT! If you install and use all of these plugins, you’ll get a great jump start on your search engine optimization joruney.

All in One SEO
All in One SEO Pack is a must have for any WordPress blogger. With All in One SEO Pack you can rewrite important parts of each individual post/page including title and meta tags for highly optimized posts and pages on your blog or WordPress site.

Google XML Sitemaps

Having a sitemap is one important piece of successful SEO. With the Google XML Sitemaps plugin you can automatically generate an XML sitemap to submit to Google and other search engines.

Meta Robots WordPress plugin
If you need to keep certain pages from being indexed into your site then Meta Robots WordPress Plugin is for you! By keeping non-important pages out of the search engines such as contact us, privacy policy, and terms of service you won’t pass any of your websites SEO juice onto those pages.


SEO Friendly Images

One very common mistake many SEO amateurs and beginners make is skipping over tiny (but important) details. Adding alt and title attributes to all of your images is a great way to help your search engine rankings and increase the overall value of your website. SEO Friendly Images will automatically add proper alt and title attributes to ALL of the images on your WordPress website.

Simple Tags
One of the reasons I am such an avid WordPress supporter is the amount of detail and depth put into the software. WordPress allows you to attach tags to your posts to make them easier to find and the Simple Tags plugin makes it extremely easy to do just that. By using tags on your posts you’ll make it much easier for your customers/audience to find you!