domingo, 10 de julio de 2011

What's a Keyword? And Why Do I Need to Worry About Them?


When people go to Google, they search for things. As of June 2011, more than 3 billion searches happen every day on Google (and lots happen on Bing + Yahoo!, too). A good portion of those people are searching for information about travel, and if you build your site right and do a bit of what SEOs call "keyword research" (figuring out what people search for and how) along with "keyword targeting" (using those words and phrases in smart places on your pages), you can earn positions in the search rankings and get lots of high quality, valuable visitors coming to your site.

Shops of Covent Garden SERPs

For example, in the search I've done above, you can see that Geraldine's post - The Shops of Covent Garden, London - is ranking in position 5. On average, about 5% of searchers for that query will likely click on her page. If there's 100 searches for that phrase each month, Geraldine will get 5 extra visits to her site every month. If she wrote 5 blog posts every day that performed like this, in a few years she'd have some pretty amazing traffic. And, of course, if she got to ranking #1 or #2 for some of those keywords or ranked #5 for things people search for 1,000 times each month, that could be even more exciting.

In the SEO world, we call the search words and phrases that people type into Google and Bing "keywords," and we do our best to understand what people are searching for, build great pages that would make those searchers happy and try to rank high in the results to earn as many of those clicks as possible. The first part of that - understanding what people are searching for, is the critical part of "keyword research." Here's how you do that:

AdWords Screenshot

(sadly, this isn't the best example, because there's so few searches for the phrase, but you get the idea)

The screenshot above comes from Google's AdWords Keyword Tool. It's the best known keyword research tool on the web, and is likely the only one you'll need as a travel blogger unless you become very advanced at SEO. There's a few important things to understand about the tool, so I've made some notations with red numbers:

  1. This is where you enter the words to describe what you're writing about. You can use one or two words or try to be more specific. The words Google suggests will be based on what you enter here.
  2. For travel bloggers, I generally would recommend that you use the language you'll be writing in, but don't exclude any countries. Travelers search from all over the world! Don't just limit your keyword research to the United States.
  3. This is very important, even if it seems a bit complex at first. The "match type" refers to the suggestions Google will give you, and if you're not careful, this can really throw you for a loop. Basically, "exact match" is what you want most of the time (but it's not checked by default, so be sure to do that!). Exact match means that Google will only show you the keywords and search volume for that particular keyword phrase. If you use broad match or phrase match, you'll often see a much higher volume of searches, but it doesn't mean that this quantity of people actually performed that search. You can learn more about match types here.
  4. Here's your data! Looking at these keyword "suggestions" you can see what Google knows about that people search for around these keywords and how many people are performing those searches globally. The "competition" column doesn't matter too much for you here - it refers to the number of advertisers who bid against a keyword and how much they pay, but since you'll be targeting the "free" or "organic" searches, you don't need to worry about these.
  5. Google will also give some keyword "ideas" that relate to your search terms, but don't match them exactly. This can be handy for finding opportunities of things to write about or what to title your posts.

When it comes to the AdWords Keyword Tool, I recommend you play around with it - experiment, have fun, see what different clicks and buttons do, the works! Just remember - the numbers Google reports are, relatively speaking, accurate, but not precise. So, if Google says that keyword 1 has 100 searches/month and keyword 2 has 200/month, that doesn't mean that precisely that many people search each month for those words. But, it does probably mean that keyword 2 gets about twice as many searches as keyword 1.

OK. You know how to see what people search for and now you're ready to start writing some posts to earn some of those rankings and get some visitors. But, what do you actually do with those keywords?

Use them smartly in your blog posts!

Covent Garden Page Example

I've got an entire post dedicated to best practices for using keywords in your pages, but the simple rule of thumb is:

  • Make the important keyword phrase the first words in your blog post's title (if possible)
  • Use other relevant, important and/or identifying keywords in the title (for example, Geraldine's post on this topic was wisely labeled, The Shops of Covent Garden, London - both to indicate its location and because people might search for "covent garden shops, london")
  • Make the headline of the piece/page match the title (searchers don't like to click on one thing and get another!)
  • Use the keyword phrase and other important keywords in the content of the post - don't stuff or spam them in unnaturally, just try to include them where relevant and appropriate
  • If you can, make your URLs (this thing - http://www.everywhereist.com/the-shops-of-covent-garden-london/) use the keyword as well. This is pretty easy to do in Wordpress and most other blog platforms 

That's it! That's really all you need to do on the keyword front. If you need it in once sentence, it's this:

Find the words and phrases people use to search and include them prominently in the blog posts you write. 

If you've done that, you're well on your way to good SEO.


Read Original Article here

Evitar contenido duplicado con la sindicacion.

La mayoría de editores web o bloggers buscan publicar contenidos de calidad en sus webs, generalmente contenidos relevantes que interesen a lectores y a otros editores que mencionen y enlacen sus artículos desde otros sites. La sindicación de contenidos es una valiosa táctica para obtener valiosos backlinks de los cuales se benefician aquellos que publican buenos contenidos originales.

“Syndicate carefully: 
If you syndicate your content on other sites, make sure they include a link back to the original article on each syndicated article. Even with that, note that we’ll always show the (unblocked) version we think is most appropriate for users in each given search, which may or may not be the version you’d prefer.”

El problema de la sindicación es el contenido duplicado, ya que según el análisis del buscador, el contenido original puede ser interpretado como contenido repetido. Google ya lo indicó en un artículo sobre contenido duplicado en el su Webmaster Central Blog:rss2

En el caso que alguien esté interesado en un artículo original publicado por nosotros y utilice una copia del mismo en su site, ésta puede hacer que ambos contenidos sean interpretados como duplicados. En ese caso el buscador mostraría uno de los dos en los resultados de búsqueda, y no quedaría claro cual de ellos es el original, por lo que siempre existiría un riesgo de que a ojos del buscador, la autoría del artículo no se reconozca como tal.

¿Y cuales son las mejores soluciones para que el buscador entienda la sindicación y no interprete el contenido como duplicado?

Existen diversas técnicas a tener en cuenta (todas son útiles pero en cada caso en particular se utilizarían una u otra, todo depende de como queremos recibir los backlinks). A continuación mostramos 3 opciones interesantes:

1. Configurar la sindicación para que solo se publique una sinopsis (una introducción o primer párrafo de lo que ofrece el artículo original)

Muchos sites de noticias, como por ejemplo en Top.org, utilizan este tipo de sindicación. Aportando así un backlink de calidad hacia la web del editor del artículo original ya que es muy habitual encontrar que en estos sites ofrecen artículos y más información relacionada con el artículo sindicado en cuestión.

2. Utilizar del metatag ‘No index’ en la página de la copia del artículo original.

La implementación de este metatag sería un requisito que se le pediría al editor que se aprobecha de los contenidos originales. Cabe decir que esta etiqueta ‘No index’, solamente evita que Google no indexe el artículo de nuevo (y así se evita que aparezca en los resultados naturales) y que aún así el valor del backlink no se pierde ya que el aporte de PageRank se acumula de igual forma en la página del original.

Si quieres más información sobre este metatag y su uso, consúltalo aquí.

3. Utilización del tag ‘canonical’ cuando se indica el enlace a la fuente original

El uso de esta instrucción entre diferentes dominios es relativamente nuevo, Google lo hizo oficial hace un mes atrás aunque ya funcionaba con Yahoo! y Bing. Ésta instrucción permite utilizar exactamente el mismo contenido en diferentes sites indicando cual es la dirección del contenido original. Por ejemplo, si tuvieramos el artículo original en la direccion ‘http://www.miweb.com/articulo-original.html” y una copia en la dirección “http://www.otraweb.com/copia-articulo-original.html”, en ésta última debería aparecer este enlace en el encabezado de la sección:

<link rel=”canonical” href=”http://www.miweb.com/articulo-original.html” />

Tal y como pasa con el metatag ‘No index’, la utilización de este tag no evita la acumulación de PageRank a la página donde esté situado el artículo original.

Para más información sobre la utilización de este tag, consulta el artículo del blog de webmasters de Google.

También recomiendo echar un vistazo a este gráfico extraído de 

Hotel Marketing Argentina, donde se muestra de una forma muy ilustrativa el proceso de análisis, por parte de los buscadores, de los contenidos duplicados. 

Ver Articulo original en Canalip

Si te intereso este articulo este otro te puede resultar productivo : Cómo configurar tu blog para generar backlinks con el Feed RSS

 

miércoles, 6 de julio de 2011

How to setup Google Analytics on your Facebook fan pages

Here are the steps to get Google Analytics working on your facebook fan page.

1) Setup Google Analytics account. If you already have one, create a new website profile. You can name it facebook.com or facebook.com/your_page_name. You will finally get your tracking code which looks like this UA-3123123-2
2) Create your custom img tag for each of your pages you like to track. EG: contact form, services, products etc. You can use our tool to create the Google Analytics link generator for Facebook pages.
3) Add the entire custom image html tag from step 2 to the bottom of each Facebook fan page that you need to track.


Fans versus Non Fan activity

An interesting way to look at your Facebook fan page activity is to split them with activity by your Fans and non fans. To do this, we need to use segments in Google Analytics to split activity into Fan and Non-Fan activity. You can create a segment based on pages visited by your user or specific event.

fans-vs-non-fans2

Using segments to track Fan/Non Fan activity

We will need to use FBJS (Facebook Javascript) and the tag <fb:visible-to-connection>. The tag will allow us to display a section to Fans and another to Non-Fans. We have managed to use this to create a single action button but calling different FBJS functions depending on whether the user is a fan of the page or not. Once a Javascript function is activated, the appropriate tracking image has to be shown to log the visit correctly on Google Analytics. Displaying this tracking image causes a hit to be registered on Google Analytics and this can be used to segment traffic. Visit our tracking page to get the code and see this in action.

Tracking activity on forms and on your pages

This is a good method to track user engagement with the Facebook page. Several users might visit your Facebook page but only a few might actually engage with the form. When your custom Facebook fan page loads, Facebook does not activate the Javascript you have written. This is only activated when a user performs an activity. Something like clicking on a button, clicking of your form, playing a video, entering some details onto the form, clicking on a button of your carousel, etc. This is a good opportunity to track activity on your page. All you have to do is use a script tag like the one used in the Advanced tracking page.

Goal and Funnel Visualisation

This can be a quite powerful tool, you can track for example how many users visit your contact page, how many then proceed to engage with the page and how many eventually click on the contact button. Here is an example of a funnel visualisation.

A simple funnel visualisation

A simple two step funnel visualisation

The above two step funnel visualisation shows you how many users visited our contact page and how many proceeded to submit the form. This could have also been made into a three step funnel displaying how many visited the contact page, how many clicked around and how many actually clicked the contact button.

Tracking Purchases or clicks on your fan page

To track clicks which can be purchases, clicks on links, etc. We generate a tracking code for each action that we want to track using our trusted Google Analytics code generator. We then load this image location on click of a button, or link, etc using the usual onclick event handler.

In conclusion

These techniques require some knowledge of Javascript and a reasonable understanding of how the image technique lets you work around Facebook’s Javascript restriction. You can get the complete source code to how we segregate fan and non fan visits, etc here. We are a web development company and will be happy to help you out with your unique tracking needs on your Facebook page. Please share your thoughts, comments and ideas on how to track user behaviour in more depth.


Read original Article or visit Social Media for Hotels by HMKT Arg.