The ‘Information’ Age

Relevancy is a good thing. It makes search and the world more efficient. Many attempts at relevancy, like search is getting more social, may just create more noise. But computers are getting better at understanding language is a good thing “our measurements show that synonyms affect 70 percent of user searches across the more than 100 languages Google supports.”

But it seems each increase in relevancy justifies additional increases in irrelevancy to increase monetization.

‘Accidental’ Hijacking

Each individual piece sounds useful and helpful, but the end effect (and goal) is hijacking and misdirecting traffic to display more ads.

Search companies are hijacking publisher content to offer “answers” right in the search results, while testing displaying full images in the image search results.

Even when you claim your own business listing, Google will show your customers recommendations of other competing businesses on your business profile page. One of the best advertising based business models is extortion. And while the sum of the pieces may amount to that, certain ad networks are clever in how they tie it all together to *appear* innocent, even when acting like a shark.

What does a spam site do? Scrape content, misdirect visitors, and hope to get an ad click. Look at the above sequence through the same lens. It is the same thing – eeeeeeeeeevil.

SEO is Evil, Except When I Am Selling It!!!!

And yet a lot of the largest online spam publishers / scraper websites are taking a page out of Google’s book…call SEO professionals scammers selling snake oil, while building search arbitrage businesses based on stealing third party content and wrapping it in ads. Perhaps the goal of charlatan douchebags like Dave Sifry and Jason Calacanis are to promote the Google anti-SEO public relations messaging in hoping that Google will not burn their sites to the ground. It may well work.

A popular SEO figure who sold a content management system based on cloaking mentioned at a secret meeting amongst Google’s spam team and top SEOs that he loves turning in spammers. If he didn’t promote Google’s misinformed view he probably wouldn’t get away with a business model built on cloaking.

What are Technorati and Mahalo but glorified scraper websites? And yet to promote such trash they claim to be search evangelists fighting for the purity of the search results (while they scrape scrape scrape).

While publicly those people trash SEO, they sell SEO services, and a friend told me that they are even using high pressure telemarketing and email spam to pitch “services” … one such message I was forwarded stated:

Thanks for taking the time to review our new and improved demo. I’m glad you liked it and I’m forwarding you the PowerPoint version for you to truly experience the animation. Once you’ve distributed to the right parties I can always hop on a quick call to go through the demo really quick to really emphasize the value as an SEO component which is what the end result really is. Along the way you reap the benefits of having great content, a social media platform that all work to SEO and drive traffic. So even if up front the value is hard to fit into the normal SEO purchase, think of it as SEO with bells and whistles.

And as long as Google continues to rank the main scraper websites from such companies, that provides the proof of value which sells the garbage content to big brands. And so the above pitch was made by you-know-who, and Demand Media is going to start selling content to old media sites “One example Kydd mentioned was Demand’s partnership with the travel section of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, which, like most newspapers, is strapped for cash.”

Quick question: what is to prevent Demand Media from partnering with hundreds of such media sites to leverage the combination of cheap labor, keyword earnings data, the media site’s PageRank, and really just doing some serious damage to the search results? Unless the trend is altered, within 3 years almost any midtail to longtail keyword of value will have at least 7 of the top 10 results recycling the same poorly researched semi-legible informationless information.

All of the top Google search results say it is true. SO IT MUST BE!!!

AOL made a slight profit this past year and they are scaling a similar “content” business model, pushing tons of robo reporters to conduct flavor of the minute interviews.

Who Does This Hurt?

  • searchers who may presume stuff in the search results is factually correct

  • publishers which actually do real research and ensure their content is factually correct
  • individual artists and authors who are experts but who are not hype driven & not self promotional enough to outrank dumbed down rewrites of their content heavily wrapped in Google ads

Recently there was an article about how fremium often does not work as well as advertised and the NYT highlighted Jaron Lanier’s take on the online social contract:

“The basic idea of this contract,” he writes, “is that authors, journalists, musicians and artists are encouraged to treat the fruits of their intellects and imaginations as fragments to be given without pay to the hive mind. Reciprocity takes the form of self-promotion. Culture is to become precisely nothing but advertising.”

The above has been highlighted many times on this blog, but its damage has been far faster and far more widespread than even I anticipated.

Since Google is scraping so much CitySearch content, CitySearch felt the need to become a distributed content & ad network to remain relevant.

Strategic Advertising Fraud

Many solid publishers are getting lost in the ad mix:

The lingering effects of the economic recession, coupled with an expanding supply of efficient, and highly targeted online advertising networks, is reshaping the way big advertisers and agencies perceive the value of online media outlets. The result has been a pronounced polarization of the online advertising marketplace, with perceived demand rising for both the high-end of the most premium publishers and the low-end of ad networks and aggregators. This has caused perceived advertising value for the muddled middle of the marketplace – all but the most premium publishing sites, and the major online portals like AOL, Microsoft and Yahoo – to erode, as the ad industry focuses its attention on the top and the bottom players.

Those ad networks are (of course) full of fraudulent distribution which helps make them seem cheaper than they are, while leeching off the legitimate publishers and driving down CPM rates on legitimate media.

Click fraud has hurt the Google network’s image, but a lot of it was isolated incidents from amateurs. While Yahoo! search got killed by fraud, Google still did pretty well.

But as Demand Media saturates their site the returns lower and they are in need of more links to get more “content” indexed. And so they are promoting a business model based on incentivized publishing, which includes both “The more high quality links to your article there are on the web, the more highly a search engine will rank it” and “Your family and friends are probably curious about what you are writing anyway. Send them links and invite them to take a look!”

Given that those author’s articles are hidden in the bowels of a large site (and that they are already being encouraged to build exposure), how big of a jump is it to assume that some of them will search for this or this? How many of them will create unofficial click rings? How many will ask friends to click an ad while they view it? How will Google be able to detect such activity given the big smokescreen such a large site provides? They can’t.

The Shifting Moat

As online ad networks become more polluted will that finally push brands into investing in top social media sites? Yes a lot of social media is seedy…but, increasingly, the “content” websites are not looking much better.

Who does the rise of content scrapers help? Those who are involved in the manufacturing of bulk misinformation, search companies which pay people to steal content and wrap it in their ads, and those who sell subscription content (well, up until some of the above outfits buy subscriptions to those sites to re-write and dumb down the content). In some markets (where the market leader is clear and obvious and oftenly referenced on the garbitrage websites) the backfill junk content might also help develop a competitive moat between the top brands and weaker competitors. It might also help some people involved in analytics, as more businesses need to squeeze every ounce of profit to stay alive.

Success from scratch in many polluted markets will require more grit, more scars, and better differentiation. As robotic content fills the search results, people will likely gravitate toward the expression of emotions. At the same time some employers are trying to prevent employees from having the opportunity to get their hands dirty, leaving an opportunity for competing businesses who want the additional exposure.

Testing How Crawl Priority Works

Posted by mgalecki

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 SEOmoz, Inc.

A SHORT INTRODUCTION…

We all know that the search engine robots more frequently visit popular pages, i.e. those that have the largest number of incoming links, both internal and external ones. The architecture of a website is usually correlated with the popularity of these pages expressed by number of backlinks:

  • Home page has the most backlinks,
  • 1st (e.g. product categories), 2nd & 3rd level pages obtain less links,
  • finally the least important are deep pages (with articles, classified ads, product pages, etc).

The above mentioned “importance” of web pages versus the web site architecture has been illustrated in one of the Rand’s posts titled "Diagrams for Solving Crawl Priority & Indexation Issues":

Typical Site's Link Earning Potential by Content Section

Important pages tend to have a different priority of indexation, and this was also presented very nicely by Rand:

Spider Crawl Priority Paths Graphic

Purple spots are those with the highest number of external links. As it can be seen, the pages which are close, take some of the popularity and they pass part of it further (pink spots). All the other spots stand for pages that are too far from the entrance points of search engine robots, which means that the chance of their indexation is much smaller.

In case of classified websites, which contain a lot of content, the above diagram should include subsequent category listing or search results pages. They are obviously less important than the main category pages, but their indexing additionally influences the indexation of their components – ad details pages. This is particularly important when the listing starts with so called premium ads, which change less often than standard classifieds.

BEFORE THE TEST…

Having this theoretical information, we have decided to see how it is like in practice. We have analyzed a website of http://www.morusek.pl (with animals and pets related classifieds from Poland) which has a total number of indexed pages exceeding 100,000. Using the combination of "site" and "inurl" queries we checked what is the number of indexed pages with a list of classifieds (in Polish “ogloszenia”): http://www.google.pl/search?q=site%3Awww.morusek.pl+inurl%3A%22%2F0%2F%22+inurl%3Aogloszenia

The initial results were the following:

Indexation status in Google of ad listing pages of Morusek.pl

To continue the analysis, we excluded the first pages, as the numbers here are influenced by existence of some category pages with no classifieds at the moment, but which are indexable (there are crawlable links in the menu). In addition, to verify the effectiveness of the "site" query, we took into account a number of pages reported by Google Webmaster Tools (GWT) under "Internal Links". The results were as follows:

Indexation of ad listing pages

WHAT’S IMPORTANT TO KNOW?

The first conclusion is obviously that the higher the page number is, the less probability that the page will be indexed. Secondly, while the actual numbers of GWT and “site” queries vary a lot, the trends (slopes) are almost the same. On average, the chance that the robot will crawl to the next page of search results decreases by 1,2-1,3% per page.

It is also interesting that, according to Google Webmaster Tools, pages from 2 to 4 have a good indexation ratio which later decreases dramatically at the fifth position. For example, for sites with number 4 the level of indexation is 60%, while for pages number 15 it falls below 30% (according to Google Webmaster Tools), or 40% (for the command “site” in Google). This is due to the fact that Googlebots have a much longer way to reach the appropriate link in case of the latter (a link to page 15 first appears on page 12), while there are direct links to pages 2, 3 and 4 on the first pages of search listings (see below):

Pagination links of Morusek.pl before introducing the change

THE SUBJECT OF THE TEST: INTRODUCING MORE LINKS

We decided to test what would be the changes in indexation ratios if we introduced more links to subsequent ad listings pages. On the first page of each category we added links to the 5th, 10th and 15th pages as show on the picture below:

Pagination links on Morusek.pl after the change

After a month we tested the changes. Due to inaccurate results returned by the command “site” in Google (number of indexed pages seemed to be greater than the actual number of them) we present data from Google Webmaster Tools (internal links) only:

Comparison of before and after changes of indexation of ad listing pages

THE RESULTS

The graph clearly shows us that indexation of pages that were added to the listing on the first page is much higher after the change (pages: 5th, 10th and 15th), and actually equals the indexation of pages 2, 3 and 4.

However, the increase in indexation of pages directly linked from the home page did not affect the indexation of the neighbouring pages. For example, we can see a huge increase for page 10, but there is no change for pages 9 and 11. The conclusion is that for Googlebots these pages are too far from the points of entry. Only category pages for main region have incoming links. To index page 9 of the intersection of categories and regions, the robots would have to go the following path:

  1. main category page (entry point),
  2. category page + region (first page of results),
  3. category page + region (tenth page of results),
  4. category page + region (page 9  of the results).

What makes it even worse, not all the category pages have incoming links.

THE CONCLUSIONS

For classifieds or e-commerce websites, the conclusion is that the more pages linked in the listing, the greater the chance that they will be indexed. In general, it is clear that the farther from the point of entry (external link), the less chance that the page will be indexed. Therefore, it is advisable not to create sites with a very deep structure and to remember that the pages far from the points of entry should be additionally linked to (for example as "similar products", "see also", "related categories", etc.).

Looking at the chart we can see yet another change – a slight decrease in indexation of pages 2, 3 and 4. This can be either because there are new pages added recently and they have not been indexed yet (when the number of ads in a certain category has started to exceed the space on the first page), or due to increase in the number of outcoming links on the first page. I would rather bet the first explanation, because in fact the new links were added to a small percentage of pages. There are only 400 fifth pages (so the links to fifth pages were placed on 0,5% of all the first pages). Pages 10 and 15 are even less numerous.

Introduction of additional links has not increased the level of indexation of classifieds, however I suppose that the rate of change was simply too small to affect their indexation. Moreover, the indexation of ads of Morusek.pl exceeded already 80% when the experiment started. Such changes can produce a visible increase in the number of indexed pages in case of sites where the rate of change is much higher and the level of indexation of classifieds or products – lower.

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Basics of Image Search Optimization

by Mark Maynem

Tips for image optimizationIn March 2009 Google image search was labeled as Google’s fourth hottest property by Hitwise. The report went on to show that Google image search attributed 5.79% to the company’s monthly market share of visits. With this type of data and developments in universal search the smart search marketer will leverage this area to his or her advantage.

Before undertaking image search optimization many search marketers will evaluate its value in relation to its clients. Will the value of this activity be higher than another SEO activity? This is important, as image optimization can be time consuming and lends itself to being more beneficial to some sites than others.

Image Optimization Tips

Filenames – Include the keyword you are targeting within the file name. Remember to use hyphens for spaces between the keywords.

Image Formatting – Make sure you use the correct image formats. For example save photos as JPG files etc.

Image Quality – Use good quality images, which will read well when shown in a thumbnail format. Poor quality images are unlikely to get click throughs.

Strings – Avoid using strings in image urls. Make your image urls as a readable as possible to human beings.

Use the ALT Attribute – Mention your keywords within the ALT tag where appropriate. Remember that ALT tags are used to help people who are visually impaired use your site. The ALT tag should not just be the keyword itself. This could be seen as spammy.

Text surrounding the image – Search engines will look at the text surrounding an image to help get an insight to what an image might be about. Make sure the images relate to the content that they are in close proximity with.

Don’t restrict access to images – Adding image folders to robots.txt files is a common mistake and prevents your images from being indexed.

Image originality – Original photos or image work is much more likely to be given special attention. If you have created original images then it might be an idea to use watermarks or set special permissions to users. Retailers can have the most difficulty here as they often use images produced by the supplier. Think about why a search engine would favor your images over another.

Most good search marketers put conversions and return on investment at the centre of their campaigns. Many retailers have reported low conversions in relation to image search because many are simply there to steal their product images. The thing to keep in mind is what will the visitor find once they arrive at your site. Can you provide reasons for visitors to explore your site a little more?

Despite the experience of some retailers more and more consumers are shopping using image search. This is because they can quickly find what they are looking for without having to sift through many sites with promotional material distracting them. In some specialist or very niche areas some sites won’t show images so consumers will use image search to find the closest thing to what they were looking for.

Ranking in image search can also provide opportunities to empower your brand and build up your reputation. Many sites have gained large volumes of traffic through image search.

I think almost any site can benefit from image search but a careful analysis needs to be made first. Is image search optimization a good use of your clients time?

Mark Mayne – Owner of Internet marketing blog Maynem and works for UK based SEO company PushON. Mark has been in the industry for over two and a half years and runs a multitude of websites.

Basics of Image Search Optimization is a post from: SEO in The Desert | More about Palm Springs SEO


Basics of Image Search Optimization

by Mark Maynem

Tips for image optimizationIn March 2009 Google image search was labeled as Google’s fourth hottest property by Hitwise. The report went on to show that Google image search attributed 5.79% to the company’s monthly market share of visits. With this type of data and developments in universal search the smart search marketer will leverage this area to his or her advantage.

Before undertaking image search optimization many search marketers will evaluate its value in relation to its clients. Will the value of this activity be higher than another SEO activity? This is important, as image optimization can be time consuming and lends itself to being more beneficial to some sites than others.

Image Optimization Tips

Filenames – Include the keyword you are targeting within the file name. Remember to use hyphens for spaces between the keywords.

Image Formatting – Make sure you use the correct image formats. For example save photos as JPG files etc.

Image Quality – Use good quality images, which will read well when shown in a thumbnail format. Poor quality images are unlikely to get click throughs.

Strings – Avoid using strings in image urls. Make your image urls as a readable as possible to human beings.

Use the ALT Attribute – Mention your keywords within the ALT tag where appropriate. Remember that ALT tags are used to help people who are visually impaired use your site. The ALT tag should not just be the keyword itself. This could be seen as spammy.

Text surrounding the image – Search engines will look at the text surrounding an image to help get an insight to what an image might be about. Make sure the images relate to the content that they are in close proximity with.

Don’t restrict access to images – Adding image folders to robots.txt files is a common mistake and prevents your images from being indexed.

Image originality – Original photos or image work is much more likely to be given special attention. If you have created original images then it might be an idea to use watermarks or set special permissions to users. Retailers can have the most difficulty here as they often use images produced by the supplier. Think about why a search engine would favor your images over another.

Most good search marketers put conversions and return on investment at the centre of their campaigns. Many retailers have reported low conversions in relation to image search because many are simply there to steal their product images. The thing to keep in mind is what will the visitor find once they arrive at your site. Can you provide reasons for visitors to explore your site a little more?

Despite the experience of some retailers more and more consumers are shopping using image search. This is because they can quickly find what they are looking for without having to sift through many sites with promotional material distracting them. In some specialist or very niche areas some sites won’t show images so consumers will use image search to find the closest thing to what they were looking for.

Ranking in image search can also provide opportunities to empower your brand and build up your reputation. Many sites have gained large volumes of traffic through image search.

I think almost any site can benefit from image search but a careful analysis needs to be made first. Is image search optimization a good use of your clients time?

Mark Mayne – Owner of Internet marketing blog Maynem and works for UK based SEO company PushON. Mark has been in the industry for over two and a half years and runs a multitude of websites.

Basics of Image Search Optimization is a post from: SEO in The Desert | More about Palm Springs SEO


Basics of Image Search Optimization

by Mark Maynem

Tips for image optimizationIn March 2009 Google image search was labeled as Google’s fourth hottest property by Hitwise. The report went on to show that Google image search attributed 5.79% to the company’s monthly market share of visits. With this type of data and developments in universal search the smart search marketer will leverage this area to his or her advantage.

Before undertaking image search optimization many search marketers will evaluate its value in relation to its clients. Will the value of this activity be higher than another SEO activity? This is important, as image optimization can be time consuming and lends itself to being more beneficial to some sites than others.

Image Optimization Tips

Filenames – Include the keyword you are targeting within the file name. Remember to use hyphens for spaces between the keywords.

Image Formatting – Make sure you use the correct image formats. For example save photos as JPG files etc.

Image Quality – Use good quality images, which will read well when shown in a thumbnail format. Poor quality images are unlikely to get click throughs.

Strings – Avoid using strings in image urls. Make your image urls as a readable as possible to human beings.

Use the ALT Attribute – Mention your keywords within the ALT tag where appropriate. Remember that ALT tags are used to help people who are visually impaired use your site. The ALT tag should not just be the keyword itself. This could be seen as spammy.

Text surrounding the image – Search engines will look at the text surrounding an image to help get an insight to what an image might be about. Make sure the images relate to the content that they are in close proximity with.

Don’t restrict access to images – Adding image folders to robots.txt files is a common mistake and prevents your images from being indexed.

Image originality – Original photos or image work is much more likely to be given special attention. If you have created original images then it might be an idea to use watermarks or set special permissions to users. Retailers can have the most difficulty here as they often use images produced by the supplier. Think about why a search engine would favor your images over another.

Most good search marketers put conversions and return on investment at the centre of their campaigns. Many retailers have reported low conversions in relation to image search because many are simply there to steal their product images. The thing to keep in mind is what will the visitor find once they arrive at your site. Can you provide reasons for visitors to explore your site a little more?

Despite the experience of some retailers more and more consumers are shopping using image search. This is because they can quickly find what they are looking for without having to sift through many sites with promotional material distracting them. In some specialist or very niche areas some sites won’t show images so consumers will use image search to find the closest thing to what they were looking for.

Ranking in image search can also provide opportunities to empower your brand and build up your reputation. Many sites have gained large volumes of traffic through image search.

I think almost any site can benefit from image search but a careful analysis needs to be made first. Is image search optimization a good use of your clients time?

Mark Mayne – Owner of Internet marketing blog Maynem and works for UK based SEO company PushON. Mark has been in the industry for over two and a half years and runs a multitude of websites.

Basics of Image Search Optimization is a post from: SEO in The Desert | More about Palm Springs SEO


Basics of Image Search Optimization

by Mark Maynem

Tips for image optimizationIn March 2009 Google image search was labeled as Google’s fourth hottest property by Hitwise. The report went on to show that Google image search attributed 5.79% to the company’s monthly market share of visits. With this type of data and developments in universal search the smart search marketer will leverage this area to his or her advantage.

Before undertaking image search optimization many search marketers will evaluate its value in relation to its clients. Will the value of this activity be higher than another SEO activity? This is important, as image optimization can be time consuming and lends itself to being more beneficial to some sites than others.

Image Optimization Tips

Filenames – Include the keyword you are targeting within the file name. Remember to use hyphens for spaces between the keywords.

Image Formatting – Make sure you use the correct image formats. For example save photos as JPG files etc.

Image Quality – Use good quality images, which will read well when shown in a thumbnail format. Poor quality images are unlikely to get click throughs.

Strings – Avoid using strings in image urls. Make your image urls as a readable as possible to human beings.

Use the ALT Attribute – Mention your keywords within the ALT tag where appropriate. Remember that ALT tags are used to help people who are visually impaired use your site. The ALT tag should not just be the keyword itself. This could be seen as spammy.

Text surrounding the image – Search engines will look at the text surrounding an image to help get an insight to what an image might be about. Make sure the images relate to the content that they are in close proximity with.

Don’t restrict access to images – Adding image folders to robots.txt files is a common mistake and prevents your images from being indexed.

Image originality – Original photos or image work is much more likely to be given special attention. If you have created original images then it might be an idea to use watermarks or set special permissions to users. Retailers can have the most difficulty here as they often use images produced by the supplier. Think about why a search engine would favor your images over another.

Most good search marketers put conversions and return on investment at the centre of their campaigns. Many retailers have reported low conversions in relation to image search because many are simply there to steal their product images. The thing to keep in mind is what will the visitor find once they arrive at your site. Can you provide reasons for visitors to explore your site a little more?

Despite the experience of some retailers more and more consumers are shopping using image search. This is because they can quickly find what they are looking for without having to sift through many sites with promotional material distracting them. In some specialist or very niche areas some sites won’t show images so consumers will use image search to find the closest thing to what they were looking for.

Ranking in image search can also provide opportunities to empower your brand and build up your reputation. Many sites have gained large volumes of traffic through image search.

I think almost any site can benefit from image search but a careful analysis needs to be made first. Is image search optimization a good use of your clients time?

Mark Mayne – Owner of Internet marketing blog Maynem and works for UK based SEO company PushON. Mark has been in the industry for over two and a half years and runs a multitude of websites.

Basics of Image Search Optimization is a post from: SEO in The Desert | More about Palm Springs SEO


Basics of Image Search Optimization

by Mark Maynem

Tips for image optimizationIn March 2009 Google image search was labeled as Google’s fourth hottest property by Hitwise. The report went on to show that Google image search attributed 5.79% to the company’s monthly market share of visits. With this type of data and developments in universal search the smart search marketer will leverage this area to his or her advantage.

Before undertaking image search optimization many search marketers will evaluate its value in relation to its clients. Will the value of this activity be higher than another SEO activity? This is important, as image optimization can be time consuming and lends itself to being more beneficial to some sites than others.

Image Optimization Tips

Filenames – Include the keyword you are targeting within the file name. Remember to use hyphens for spaces between the keywords.

Image Formatting – Make sure you use the correct image formats. For example save photos as JPG files etc.

Image Quality – Use good quality images, which will read well when shown in a thumbnail format. Poor quality images are unlikely to get click throughs.

Strings – Avoid using strings in image urls. Make your image urls as a readable as possible to human beings.

Use the ALT Attribute – Mention your keywords within the ALT tag where appropriate. Remember that ALT tags are used to help people who are visually impaired use your site. The ALT tag should not just be the keyword itself. This could be seen as spammy.

Text surrounding the image – Search engines will look at the text surrounding an image to help get an insight to what an image might be about. Make sure the images relate to the content that they are in close proximity with.

Don’t restrict access to images – Adding image folders to robots.txt files is a common mistake and prevents your images from being indexed.

Image originality – Original photos or image work is much more likely to be given special attention. If you have created original images then it might be an idea to use watermarks or set special permissions to users. Retailers can have the most difficulty here as they often use images produced by the supplier. Think about why a search engine would favor your images over another.

Most good search marketers put conversions and return on investment at the centre of their campaigns. Many retailers have reported low conversions in relation to image search because many are simply there to steal their product images. The thing to keep in mind is what will the visitor find once they arrive at your site. Can you provide reasons for visitors to explore your site a little more?

Despite the experience of some retailers more and more consumers are shopping using image search. This is because they can quickly find what they are looking for without having to sift through many sites with promotional material distracting them. In some specialist or very niche areas some sites won’t show images so consumers will use image search to find the closest thing to what they were looking for.

Ranking in image search can also provide opportunities to empower your brand and build up your reputation. Many sites have gained large volumes of traffic through image search.

I think almost any site can benefit from image search but a careful analysis needs to be made first. Is image search optimization a good use of your clients time?

Mark Mayne – Owner of Internet marketing blog Maynem and works for UK based SEO company PushON. Mark has been in the industry for over two and a half years and runs a multitude of websites.

Basics of Image Search Optimization is a post from: SEO in The Desert | More about Palm Springs SEO


Basics of Image Search Optimization

by Mark Maynem

Tips for image optimizationIn March 2009 Google image search was labeled as Google’s fourth hottest property by Hitwise. The report went on to show that Google image search attributed 5.79% to the company’s monthly market share of visits. With this type of data and developments in universal search the smart search marketer will leverage this area to his or her advantage.

Before undertaking image search optimization many search marketers will evaluate its value in relation to its clients. Will the value of this activity be higher than another SEO activity? This is important, as image optimization can be time consuming and lends itself to being more beneficial to some sites than others.

Image Optimization Tips

Filenames – Include the keyword you are targeting within the file name. Remember to use hyphens for spaces between the keywords.

Image Formatting – Make sure you use the correct image formats. For example save photos as JPG files etc.

Image Quality – Use good quality images, which will read well when shown in a thumbnail format. Poor quality images are unlikely to get click throughs.

Strings – Avoid using strings in image urls. Make your image urls as a readable as possible to human beings.

Use the ALT Attribute – Mention your keywords within the ALT tag where appropriate. Remember that ALT tags are used to help people who are visually impaired use your site. The ALT tag should not just be the keyword itself. This could be seen as spammy.

Text surrounding the image – Search engines will look at the text surrounding an image to help get an insight to what an image might be about. Make sure the images relate to the content that they are in close proximity with.

Don’t restrict access to images – Adding image folders to robots.txt files is a common mistake and prevents your images from being indexed.

Image originality – Original photos or image work is much more likely to be given special attention. If you have created original images then it might be an idea to use watermarks or set special permissions to users. Retailers can have the most difficulty here as they often use images produced by the supplier. Think about why a search engine would favor your images over another.

Most good search marketers put conversions and return on investment at the centre of their campaigns. Many retailers have reported low conversions in relation to image search because many are simply there to steal their product images. The thing to keep in mind is what will the visitor find once they arrive at your site. Can you provide reasons for visitors to explore your site a little more?

Despite the experience of some retailers more and more consumers are shopping using image search. This is because they can quickly find what they are looking for without having to sift through many sites with promotional material distracting them. In some specialist or very niche areas some sites won’t show images so consumers will use image search to find the closest thing to what they were looking for.

Ranking in image search can also provide opportunities to empower your brand and build up your reputation. Many sites have gained large volumes of traffic through image search.

I think almost any site can benefit from image search but a careful analysis needs to be made first. Is image search optimization a good use of your clients time?

Mark Mayne – Owner of Internet marketing blog Maynem and works for UK based SEO company PushON. Mark has been in the industry for over two and a half years and runs a multitude of websites.

Basics of Image Search Optimization is a post from: SEO in The Desert | More about Palm Springs SEO


Basics of Image Search Optimization

by Mark Maynem

Tips for image optimizationIn March 2009 Google image search was labeled as Google’s fourth hottest property by Hitwise. The report went on to show that Google image search attributed 5.79% to the company’s monthly market share of visits. With this type of data and developments in universal search the smart search marketer will leverage this area to his or her advantage.

Before undertaking image search optimization many search marketers will evaluate its value in relation to its clients. Will the value of this activity be higher than another SEO activity? This is important, as image optimization can be time consuming and lends itself to being more beneficial to some sites than others.

Image Optimization Tips

Filenames – Include the keyword you are targeting within the file name. Remember to use hyphens for spaces between the keywords.

Image Formatting – Make sure you use the correct image formats. For example save photos as JPG files etc.

Image Quality – Use good quality images, which will read well when shown in a thumbnail format. Poor quality images are unlikely to get click throughs.

Strings – Avoid using strings in image urls. Make your image urls as a readable as possible to human beings.

Use the ALT Attribute – Mention your keywords within the ALT tag where appropriate. Remember that ALT tags are used to help people who are visually impaired use your site. The ALT tag should not just be the keyword itself. This could be seen as spammy.

Text surrounding the image – Search engines will look at the text surrounding an image to help get an insight to what an image might be about. Make sure the images relate to the content that they are in close proximity with.

Don’t restrict access to images – Adding image folders to robots.txt files is a common mistake and prevents your images from being indexed.

Image originality – Original photos or image work is much more likely to be given special attention. If you have created original images then it might be an idea to use watermarks or set special permissions to users. Retailers can have the most difficulty here as they often use images produced by the supplier. Think about why a search engine would favor your images over another.

Most good search marketers put conversions and return on investment at the centre of their campaigns. Many retailers have reported low conversions in relation to image search because many are simply there to steal their product images. The thing to keep in mind is what will the visitor find once they arrive at your site. Can you provide reasons for visitors to explore your site a little more?

Despite the experience of some retailers more and more consumers are shopping using image search. This is because they can quickly find what they are looking for without having to sift through many sites with promotional material distracting them. In some specialist or very niche areas some sites won’t show images so consumers will use image search to find the closest thing to what they were looking for.

Ranking in image search can also provide opportunities to empower your brand and build up your reputation. Many sites have gained large volumes of traffic through image search.

I think almost any site can benefit from image search but a careful analysis needs to be made first. Is image search optimization a good use of your clients time?

Mark Mayne – Owner of Internet marketing blog Maynem and works for UK based SEO company PushON. Mark has been in the industry for over two and a half years and runs a multitude of websites.

Basics of Image Search Optimization is a post from: SEO in The Desert | More about Palm Springs SEO


Basics of Image Search Optimization

by Mark Maynem

Tips for image optimizationIn March 2009 Google image search was labeled as Google’s fourth hottest property by Hitwise. The report went on to show that Google image search attributed 5.79% to the company’s monthly market share of visits. With this type of data and developments in universal search the smart search marketer will leverage this area to his or her advantage.

Before undertaking image search optimization many search marketers will evaluate its value in relation to its clients. Will the value of this activity be higher than another SEO activity? This is important, as image optimization can be time consuming and lends itself to being more beneficial to some sites than others.

Image Optimization Tips

Filenames – Include the keyword you are targeting within the file name. Remember to use hyphens for spaces between the keywords.

Image Formatting – Make sure you use the correct image formats. For example save photos as JPG files etc.

Image Quality – Use good quality images, which will read well when shown in a thumbnail format. Poor quality images are unlikely to get click throughs.

Strings – Avoid using strings in image urls. Make your image urls as a readable as possible to human beings.

Use the ALT Attribute – Mention your keywords within the ALT tag where appropriate. Remember that ALT tags are used to help people who are visually impaired use your site. The ALT tag should not just be the keyword itself. This could be seen as spammy.

Text surrounding the image – Search engines will look at the text surrounding an image to help get an insight to what an image might be about. Make sure the images relate to the content that they are in close proximity with.

Don’t restrict access to images – Adding image folders to robots.txt files is a common mistake and prevents your images from being indexed.

Image originality – Original photos or image work is much more likely to be given special attention. If you have created original images then it might be an idea to use watermarks or set special permissions to users. Retailers can have the most difficulty here as they often use images produced by the supplier. Think about why a search engine would favor your images over another.

Most good search marketers put conversions and return on investment at the centre of their campaigns. Many retailers have reported low conversions in relation to image search because many are simply there to steal their product images. The thing to keep in mind is what will the visitor find once they arrive at your site. Can you provide reasons for visitors to explore your site a little more?

Despite the experience of some retailers more and more consumers are shopping using image search. This is because they can quickly find what they are looking for without having to sift through many sites with promotional material distracting them. In some specialist or very niche areas some sites won’t show images so consumers will use image search to find the closest thing to what they were looking for.

Ranking in image search can also provide opportunities to empower your brand and build up your reputation. Many sites have gained large volumes of traffic through image search.

I think almost any site can benefit from image search but a careful analysis needs to be made first. Is image search optimization a good use of your clients time?

Mark Mayne – Owner of Internet marketing blog Maynem and works for UK based SEO company PushON. Mark has been in the industry for over two and a half years and runs a multitude of websites.

Basics of Image Search Optimization is a post from: SEO in The Desert | More about Palm Springs SEO