Preventing URL’s from being crawled by Googlebot



Good uses for the Google webmaster tools. Including ways and reasons you may want to exclude certain url’s on your website. He also covers the use of the htaccess, robots.txt and even password protecting areas of your site.

He also bring up holes in the use of the nofollow tags. This is really good info if you plan on using the nofollow tag.



Posted on June 9th, 2008 in Matt Cutts Video Interviews | No Comments »

Quick answers to rankings questions



Matt clarifies the bold verses strong tag use, duplicate content, blog verses regular site rankings as well as .gov, .edu incoming links.
This is pretty informative and good info for the beginner SEO.



Posted on June 9th, 2008 in Matt Cutts Video Interviews | No Comments »

Qualities of a Good Site



Another quick but info packed video from Matt that covers snippets from Dmoz, creating content that gets you links and return visitors, site maps and if page views effects your rankings. He also covers away to check your site for crawlability.

Posted on June 9th, 2008 in Matt Cutts Video Interviews | No Comments »

Snippets listed in search results



This 8:19 movie Matt discusses how and where Google gets the snippets they list with search results. He also talks about the cache and a few other things that are useful. He even delves into the site listings under that appear under the main lisiting



Posted on June 9th, 2008 in Matt Cutts Video Interviews | No Comments »

SEO Myths



In this video Matt talks about some questions regarding the number of sites you have on the same IP that are related topically or not as well as the use of off site javascript



Posted on June 9th, 2008 in Matt Cutts Video Interviews | No Comments »

What Should SEO’s Focus in 2008


This is a short video (2 min 19 seconds) that gives a couple of great tips regarding the importance of being niche specific, local google map search and the value of designing your site for mobile devices



Posted on June 9th, 2008 in Matt Cutts Video Interviews | No Comments »

Matt Cutts Whitehat SEO tips for Bloggers



Matt Cutts did this interview back in 2007. The info he gives really good and applies still applies today.
The topics he covers are title tags, page extensions, synonyms, the extensions he uses on his wordpress blog and a whole lot more. Of course all the advice he gives is white hat and will enhance your rankings.
This video is packed with great info that is perfect for the beginner to intermediate SEO. It also works as a great refresher for the seasoned SEO.
One thing I have to say about Matt is that he has a great presence on stage. This video isn’t completely dry as you would expect.



Posted on June 8th, 2008 in Matt Cutts Video Interviews | No Comments »

7 tips for on-page optimization

The importance of on page optimization is one of the most overlooked areas of website development and SEO. Most people think it’s just the meta tags and “keyword density” that matters. If this was the case then everybody that has read up on SEO in a forum or two would be ranking fine. Obviously this is not the case.

On-page SEO is about the overall page topic and reputation. There are many different variables that come in to play when a robot decides what the page topic and reputation is. We infer things robots can’t ….yet. The programmers at Google are amazing! Anyway. All the basics are included – Meta tags, keyword density, H tags etc but it’s the combination of these factors that’s critical. I’ve gotten sites in unsophisticated niches top 3 rankings with 5 relevant links because the on-page optimization was done right. The most common mistake people make is looking at their site from a persons perspective, typically their own. When we look at something we can infer what that site is about very easily. A simple h1 tag at the top and a few images is all we as people need to figure it out. That is not the case with robots. Robots look at the whole page and I do mean whole page. The HTML, javascript, everything when they are digging through a site trying to figure out what it’s about. All it can do is comparisons.

One of the reasons content is king with Google is that it makes the webpage easy to classify. A page with lots of images and little text is very hard to classify. Think about it theres nothing there use for comparison and indexing. We can see the pictures but the spider can’t.

Here are some basic guidelines that will help wtih your on-page SEO efforts

  1. Keep your title tag short and to the point. The more phrases or words you have up there the harder you’ll have to work to get ranked for any of them. The title tag is what you need to base the content of your page on.
  2. If a phrase is in the title tag include it in your meta description and keyword tags and not a bunch of times either. Once in the keyword tag and once or the description. Twice if it gets the point across to your potential visitors in the SERP’s and doesn’t put them off. Once is better though.
  3. Have the phrase you used in your title tag in at least some type of header tag – h1 – h6. A great way to include it is to have the title tag phrase in one H tag and then break it up and include the individual words in the other header tags, assuming your site design wont look squirrely by having several H tags.
  4. Include variations of your chosen keyword or phrase in your content. Constantly repeating the same phrase throughout the page isn’t very readable and can be interpreted as spam. Use these variations naturally. English is a very expressive language so put it to good use and make the content interesting and readable. As an example if you have chosen brushes write about hair brushes, paint brushes, scrub brushes and the like. Hair, paint and scrub are all words that we naturally associate with brushes. Keep the variations & associations natural and real. Good, usable and readable content will take you much further in Google
  5. Include the keyword or phrase in bullet points if your site design allows it. Bullet points add emphasis to the items in them. Also keep in mind that the typical website visitor scans rather than reads page content. Bullet points give them quick ways to see what your site is about and this is key!
    Create more text content on your page than the text in the links leaving your page. Lets say that you have 20 links on your page and most of them are 2 words a piece. So you have 40 words in your link text. If you double that number – 80 – that is the bare minimum amount of text content you should have on your page. Remember the text in the outgoing links is also included in the overall picture the spider is getting of your page.
  6. Make sure your images have alt tags. Do NOT spam your keyphrase there. Put exactly what the image is about that way you can be found in google image searches as well. If you keep the pictures on your webpage relevant to your topic it will only enhance your optimization efforts.
  7. Proper SEO starts on the page itself. If your page topic is off your link building efforts will go to waste because the link pointing to your site isn’t relevant and accurate. The more completely everything agrees the easier it is to rank

By keeping your site readable and and designed for your visitors you’ll do much better in the serps overall



Posted on June 8th, 2008 in On-Page Optimization | No Comments »

Next Entries »