SEO Werkt!

Seo werkt!

Archive for the ‘image searches’ tag

CCFinder Simplifies Creative Commons Image Searches [Windows Downloads]

without comments


Click here to read CCFinder Simplifies Creative Commons Image Searches

Windows: I use a lot of Creative Commons licensed images and usually find my images directly through Flickr’s CC search or using the CC Search webapp on the Creative Commons web site. Both of those methods have pluses and minuses but if you need to find CC images daily you may want to consider the Windows program CCFinder. More »

Written by David Galloway

July 1st, 2012 at 6:00 pm

How Content Creators Benefit From The New SEO

without comments




  

Due to big changes in the SEO landscape, designers, photographers, videographers and writers have new opportunities to build their reputation, expand brand awareness and generate more leads. This post describes five important developments that content creators should be aware of, and then we’ll outline several ways to capitalize on them.

Five SEO Developments That Favor Content Producers

Thanks to self-publishing and social networks, the world is drowning in content. Google’s response: make it easy for searchers to drill down to exactly what they are looking for. Today, we can perform a search and look at the results all together in one big chunk, or we can carve off just a piece. We can look at search results from complete strangers, from people we know or from both.

In the past, search results simply connected keywords to websites. Today, in pursuit of an easier way to drill down, Google also connects keywords to social networks, user behavior and authors. Here are five ways this is playing out, and why it’s all great news for content creators.

1. Personalized Search

While search engine users are accustomed to getting objective results on search engine results pages (SERPs), Google now serves up “subjective” results as well. When logged into Google and with personalized search turned on, you will see SERPs that include results based on your Web browsing history, as well as content authored or endorsed by your social connections.

Personalization can radically change what you see in regular searches and image searches. Here is a Google image search that demonstrates the difference. My search for “how to use twitter” with personalization turned off yields the following:


Image search without personalization.

With personalization turned on, the results look like this:


Image search with personalization.

Notice that the first two rows of images are completely different. At the top of my personalized search, I see 10 images associated with my Google+ connections. With personalized search turned on, I also have the option to view only my personal results.

This is intriguing. Google is doing everything it can to encourage personalized search. It has a selfish interest in doing so: it wants as many people as possible to be logged into Google for as long as possible, using Google products, providing Google with data and being exposed to personalized Google ads. As personalized search gains traction with users, content creators will be able to gain a lot of search visibility in three ways:

  1. Creators become visible to their direct connections.
    Content associated with a particular creator will get top position in personalized searches conducted by people who have circled them. Imagine what would happen if a creator tripled the number of circles they were in, or if Google began to incorporate Twitter and Pinterest follows into its personalized search results.
  2. Creators become visible to their indirect connections.
    If a creator’s content is endorsed by someone in the Google+ network, the content could appear in the personalized results of searches conducted by that person’s connections. The ripple effect can extend a considerable distance.
  3. Creators become visible to people who visit their website.
    If someone frequents a creator’s website, Google will serve that creator’s content in their personalized searches.

The trend: As time goes on, expect Google to get smarter about how it ranks personalized content, and for Google to cast a wider net across social networks to retrieve it.

Quick tip for creatives: Strengthen and broaden your social connections to give your work more exposure on search engines. Keep looking for better ways to bring new visitors to your website, and to keep them coming back.

2. The Importance of Social Shares

One factor that Google considers in evaluating a page of content is its social shares. Google sees likes, +1s, tweets and other types of shares as indicators of content quality and trustworthiness. This is reasonable enough: a blog post with 1500 retweets has more clearly established value than a comparable post with five.


Social sharing is more important than ever.

At the moment, how much value Google accords to social shares is still unclear, which is fair enough because many questions remain unanswered. Is a tweet more or less valuable than a like? How do you evaluate the authority of the person doing the sharing? How are people gaming the system to inflate the number of shares?

Nevertheless, we should expect social sharing to grow in importance for SEO. First, there is demand: people would love to consider social endorsements for certain types of searches, provided they have confidence in the data. Secondly, there is self-interest: Google is committed to its social network, Google+, and isn’t about to ignore it on its own search engine.

The trend: Social sharing now has its biggest impact on standard search results. Expect Google to ratchet up the presence of share-influenced links in personalized results as well. For instance, we could start to see a variety of segmented search options that display content shared by a defined subset of your connections.

Quick tip for creatives: Make social-sharing buttons prominent to make it easy for people to share content on your website; actively engage in social media; and publish your content on websites where content is widely shared.

3. The Rise Of Search Segmentation

In the old days, there weren’t too many ways to slice and dice search results. Today, there are scores. Tomorrow, there will be hundreds.


Multiple search options create opportunities.

More segmentation means more opportunity for freelance authors to improve their search visibility based on the nature of their content. When results are lumped together in one big mass, it’s challenging for a small enterprise to stand out. However, if creatives focus their content efforts on, for example, standing out in a particular segment, then they could capture a larger share of segmented searches. (An example of how to go about this appears in the “Reading Level” segment in the next section.)

Note, too, that segmented search offers a “personalized” option, where, again, users can zero in on content based on their browsing history and social connections.

The trend: Google will continue to categorize content to help users drill down to search results that are precisely relevant to their intent, rather than broadly relevant to their keywords. In particular, segmented search options for images and video will become much more sophisticated, in response to our insatiable appetite for visual content.

Quick tip for creatives: Stay current on how Google segments content, and shape yours to stand out in segments that are natural homes for your work.

4. More Emphasis on Quality and More Transparency

For years, creatives have complained that “black hat” SEO tactics pollute rankings, pushing high-quality content down the page. However, as Google’s algorithm grows more sophisticated, it gets better at combatting black-hat practices — more great news for content producers.


Google is sending clearer SEO signals.

Google fights content spam by emphasizing quality in its algorithm and by being transparent in how quality is calculated. Quality has always been a focus; the current level of transparency is something new.

Google’s Panda update, released in 2011, was a declaration of war against content manipulators. A primary goal of this algorithm change — and of many that followed — was to decisively penalize worthless content and to reward highly relevant, meaningful and trustworthy content.

In addition to the algorithmic measures, Google is taking the smoke and mirrors out of search by more openly communicating algorithm changes to SEOs and the general public.

Why? In some cases, black-hat tactics were inadvertent, caused by website administrators using outdated techniques or misinterpreting Google’s algorithmic intent. Furthermore, a good deal of high-quality content gets lost in the search shuffle because creators simply ignore SEO. More than ever, Google wants every website to be optimized and optimized properly. The more high-caliber content Google can serve up to users in SERPs, the more business it will do.

The trend: Google will push hard in this direction, devising more accurate methods of evaluating the relevance, substance and trustworthiness of content. It will get better at interpreting both the inherent quality of the work itself and the social-sharing data associated with it.

Quick tip for creatives: Stay up to date on how to communicate the quality of your text, images and video to Google. (Links to step-by-step tutorials on how to do this are provided at the end of this post.)

5. Google+ and the rel=author Link

Google enthusiasts see the Google+ social network as the greatest thing since sliced bread. Most everybody else thinks Google+ is less useful for marketing than sliced bread. But whether or not you like Google+, the network cannot be ignored for SEO. Content creators ought to take note of two particular aspects of the network.


The rel=author link builds a creator’s brand and search visibility.

First, Google+ content gets indexed and ranked. In fact, when you publish original content on Google+, not only is it indexed and ranked, but it is given prime positioning in personalized SERPs. Images and video that are stored on Google or associated with personal pages on Google+ also receive greater exposure in search, as demonstrated earlier in the screen captures for image search.

Secondly, the rel=author link associates a page of Web content with its author’s personal Google+ profile. This is a technical mouthful, but it’s a big deal for creatives. Google has begun to link content to its creators as well as its publishers. “Authorship markup,” or “author rank,” is being developed at a furious rate because people sometimes want the option of searching for content by a particular creator or want results ranked according to the authority or expertise of the creators.

The trend: High-authority creators will see their content become more visible in search results, and for that reason, publishers will need to seek out high-authority creators to boost traffic to their websites.

Quick tip for creatives: Set up a personal Google+ profile and incorporate the rel=author link into your published content. (Instructions on how to do this are provided in the next section.)

How To Capitalize On The New SEO

Given these recent developments, let’s look at how authors can manage their content to increase its visibility and obtain all of the benefits that go along with that. Some of the following suggestions are technical in nature, while others are creative techniques that are not always thought of as aspects of SEO. However, with Google getting better at evaluating the quality of content, people are now less able to inflate the ranking of inferior content through technical manipulation and must instead treat the quality of their content itself as the linchpin of their SEO program.

Create Highly Sharable Content

SEO is no longer a game of mechanical keyword placement. In fact, SEO has moved even beyond a game of relevance and substance. For content to succeed in search today, it must be relevant, substantive and sharable. Content creators can use a variety of stylistic and marketing techniques to enhance social interest in their content, including the following:

  1. Convert dry text into visually engaging content to generate immediate interest;
  2. Provide consistently informative, well-researched and enlightening content that generates long-term interest;
  3. Develop a unique voice and style;
  4. Take a provocative stance or add humor when appropriate and compatible with the corporate style;
  5. Provide detailed content on a topic that has not been widely covered (scarcity of information increases demand);
  6. Attribute information to factual sources (trustworthy content is more confidently shared);
  7. Link generously (encourage sharing by setting a good example);
  8. Title content creatively to spark curiosity;
  9. Use Web design and typographic best practices to optimize readability and scannability;
  10. Embed video in blog posts and Web pages;
  11. Display attractive and intuitive social-sharing buttons;
  12. Give users an incentive to share.

Set-Up Methods and Benefits: Use The rel=author Link

Here’s a basic outline of how to set up rel=author links for your content. Google has a more thorough rundown.

  1. Create a personal Google+ profile page with a high-quality headshot;
  2. Validate your email address;
  3. In the byline of any content that you create, set the anchor text to be your name as it appears in your Google+ profile, and link to your profile with a URL that looks like this: https://plus.google.com/102318046680468697385?rel=author.
  4. When your content is published, link back to its URL from the “Contributor to” section of your Google+ profile.

Once your content is indexed, your Google+ profile picture and name, along with the publication date, title and description, will (sometimes) appear in SERPs, in both standard and personalized results. This gives you more exposure, and it instills trust in users that the content has a human author, and that the author is reputable. This adds up to higher ranking and more people clicking through to your content.

Please note: Author attribution is still in the early stages of development. Google frequently changes both the procedures for setting up links and the presentation of author information in SERPs. The instructional link above should be up to date whenever you are ready to dive in.

How to set up different types of content:

  • Guest blog posts
    Set up a rel=author link somewhere in your content. The most sensible place to do this is either in the byline or in the bio area. If the blog doesn’t accommodate such placement, then a rel=author link in the body of the post would work, too.
  • Infographics
    If you create an infographic, add a blurb below the image saying, “Infographic by [your name],” with a rel=author link.
  • Video
    Follow the same procedure as described above for infographics.
  • Dual authorship
    What if an article is coauthored or the author wants to credit a photographer? The best practice is to use only one rel=author link per page. If more than one link appears on a page, the first that appears in the markup will be the one whose name and image are featured in SERPs.

Bring Back Blog Marketing

Blogs are back. In terms of social sharing, blog posts are far more likely to be shared than standard Web pages. In terms of segmentation, blog posts figure prominently in search segments such as news, time ranges and, of course, blogs. Here are some blogging techniques that fit especially well in today’s SEO environment:

  • Incorporate the rel=author link into the byline of every post in your archive.
    This establishes you as the author and gives all of your existing content an SEO boost. Several WordPress plugins are available to automatically set up the links for single- and multi-author blogs. If you are using another CMS, check with the developer to see whether and how it supports rel=author linking.
  • Ramp up guest blogging efforts.
    Getting published on highly authoritative, highly shared blogs has always been useful, and adding the rel=author link to your guest posts delivers even more value.
  • Blog directly on Google+.
    Earlier, we mentioned that Google indexes and ranks original Google+ posts. To take advantage of this, some “plussers” are actually writing lengthy original posts on the network. This strategy could be well worth testing, especially if you already have an active presence on the network. And it could work particularly well for photographers, designers and videographers, who can surround their visual content with keyword-optimized text.

Consider the Reading Level When Composing

Let’s consider an example of creating targeted content to capitalize on Google’s segmented search.

Depending on the topic, writing at a particular reading level could be quite advantageous for SEO. For instance, here is how Google categorizes content that matches a search for “social media marketing”:

If you wrote a post about social media marketing at an advanced reading level, Google would probably rank it very low in its fully aggregated SERPs. Because the vast majority of content (82%) is written at an intermediate level, Google assumes that is what searchers are looking for.

However, for segmented searches, it’s a different story. Writing an advanced article would probably make you highly visible to people drilling down to that reading level. And even though it’s a small group (2%), it could include people with a lot of interest and ready to take action.

Another possibility is to write a basic article about social media marketing. Here again, there is less search competition (16%), and there is a good chance that people who are new to social media will want to drill down to basic articles.

Google does not clearly explain how it defines these three reading levels. But its model, according to Google’s Daniel M. Russell, is based primarily on input from teachers who have classified various pages of text. You can read more about Google’s reading level model on Russell’s personal blog.

The New SEO Formula: Relevance + Substance + Shares = Visibility

At one time, SEO was a fairly straightforward exercise in shaping content on a particular domain to rank highly on basically one flavor of SERPs for a given set of queries.

But as we’ve seen, Google now considers who created the content in addition to where the content lives, and query options have expanded thanks to the segmentation of search options. On top of all this, personalized search options enable users to view results based on the online behavior of themselves and their social media connections.

While technical expertise still matters tremendously in SEO, authorship is gaining ground, and quickly. Google is attempting to cut out the SEO middleman and make search a matter of directly connecting great content creators (as defined by the inherent quality of their work and their popularity) with searchers who will find great value in their content. This explains why Google is being more forthcoming about its algorithm: the maneuver levels the technical playing field and forces SEO practitioners to differentiate themselves through the content itself. What more could content creators ask for?

Resources

Below are resources containing detailed information on content-related SEO techniques that should be of interest to creatives who market themselves and their work.

Note: All images used for this post have exclusively been created by Straight North.

(al) (il)


© Brad Shorr for Smashing Magazine, 2012.

Bing’s new image search: the Pinteresting of the internet continues

without comments

Everybody wants to be Pinterest.

Bing has been updating its search engine results pages significantly this year, including an aesthetic and architectural revamp in May. Today Microsoft announced that image search, which is almost 10 percent of Bing traffic, is getting a facelift too.

A view of the Yangtze River, courtesy Bing images

The new look is gorgeous … and very reminiscent of Pinterest. I don’t know how much more of this I can handle.

With 12 saving and sharing sites that look like Pinterest, 34 Pinterest-like WordPress themes, nine Tumbler-meet-Pinterest skins, a Pinterest for porn, 11 of the 50 million Pinterest clones, and more, pretty soon the entire bloody internet is going to look like Pinterest.

That is because, of course, when you look like Pinterest you will grow from nothing to everything in days and generate obscene amounts of interest and attract ridiculous amounts of investment capital.

Right?

Presumably the investment capital part is not terribly interesting for Bing. But I bet the obscene interest and massive viral growth are. And as Rafe Needleman of CNet says, pinterest-like design is almost a virus itself.

As previously mentioned, however, the new Bing image search is gorgeous:

I mean, you could just surf the world in pictures for a while looking at pages like that, right? And that’s exactly what Microsoft intends, opining that “it’s easier than ever to sit back and enjoy yourself. You never know that you might find.”

But the new Bing image search isn’t just a pretty face. She’s smart, too, suggesting related searches (a few more than Google does) based on what people have searched for previously. Plus, Bing now provides trending image searches right on the home page — interestingly blurring search, news, and media — providing insights into the internet zeitgeist of the moment.

As of this very moment, people seem to be interested in pictures of Eva Longoria, Molly Sims, and Nick Stahl (I can’t imagine why) as well as coffee art, Mount McKinley, and Zinnias (apparently a flower of some sort):

The new Bing also enables great filtering, which is wonderful because I have always wanted pictures of purple flowers that are yellow, and a magnifying glass effect that gives users a bigger version of the image they are currently mousing over. Both are roughly similar to the Google equivalents, but a little easier to use:

It’s a great update and I enjoyed using it.

I’m just not sure I’m OK with the rampant Pinterestification that is happening to our interwebs. We’re gaining elegance and beauty, even simplicity.

What are we losing?

Filed under: offBeat, search, VentureBeat



Google Redesigns Its iPhone Search App To Be Faster And Prettier

without comments

App Store - Google Search-1

Google today launched version 2.0 of its search app for iPhone. Google completely overhauled the design of the app, which now looks and feels more like the app’s iPad version the company launched last November. The new version feels significantly faster than the last one and the new design works especially well for image searches.

In line with last year’s iPad update, the new app now features the ability to easily swipe back and forth between your search results and the pages you clicked on. It’s also become significantly easier to switch between Google’s various search features like images, places, shopping and videos. Whenever you swipe up to the top of the search results page now, a new menu opens up at the bottom of the screen that lets you switch between the different search features.

The app, of course, also still support voice search and gives users access to all of Google’s other services like Google Goggles, Gmail and Google+. One interesting feature is its ability to detect which other Google apps you have installed on your phone and then allows you to switch to them instead of using the company’s HTML5 apps.

Overall, the app is a nice improvement over the previous version. It builds upon a trend we’ve seen lately from Google toward better mobile apps, including the recent  Google+ for iPhone redesign. For the most part, though, most users will likely continue to do most of their searches from their favorite mobile browser.



Written by Frederic Lardinois

May 23rd, 2012 at 4:25 pm

Recent Update on Google’s Search Ranking Algorithm

without comments



Google rolls out updates to its search rankings algorithm pretty much daily, but those are very small changes that affect a tiny percentage of all search queries. Once a month or once every three months, on the other hand, they tend to roll up slightly bigger changes to the algorithm.

According to an article on Search Engine Land it looks like March was one of those months, and several changes were introduced in the algorithm. Here’s a quote:

There are two items on the list that make specific reference to how Google processes anchor text. Here they are, word-for-word from the announcement:

Tweaks to handling of anchor text. [launch codename "PC"] This month we turned off a classifier related to anchor text (the visible text appearing in links). Our experimental data suggested that other methods of anchor processing had greater success, so turning off this component made our scoring cleaner and more robust.

Better interpretation and use of anchor text. We’ve improved systems we use to interpret and use anchor text, and determine how relevant a given anchor might be for a given query and website.

The other changes were related to image searches, navigation queries and content freshness, which are all factors that affect pretty much all bloggers and site owners, so check out the full article and the comments as well.

Wanna make money with your website?


Original Post: Recent Update on Google’s Search Ranking Algorithm

Written by Daniel Scocco

April 10th, 2012 at 4:50 am

Use Image Searches Like a Thesaurus to Overcome Your Creative Blocks [Search]

without comments


Click here to read Use Image Searches Like a Thesaurus to Overcome Your Creative Blocks

Creative blocks are extremely frustrating. They come when you’re excited to produce something awesome but can’t manage to find the necessary inspiration to do so. When you get stuck, image searches can come to the rescue and save you from creative stagnation—you just need to take the right approach. More »

Written by Adam Dachis

March 8th, 2012 at 8:30 pm

Double Your Page Views by Adding an Image? Seriously

without comments

Pages with Images Perform Better

New research from Skyword found that business-oriented web pages with images performed 91% better than those pages without images.

Skyword examined the performance of tens of thousands of posts in performing the study, and was able to segment the value of images for business purposes (excluding entertainment, news and sports posts, among others).

So, images don’t just make a little difference…they make a ton of difference.

Adding a little commentary and common sense to the study, it seems reasonable that posts with images both perform better in search results and are also shared at a higher rate than those posts without images.

This puts an ever increasing importance on both the managing editors and content producers (the people that make your content look pretty) within the organization (full content marketing team information here).

Of course, this should come as no surprise.  In the magazine business, we had a saying that the cover of a magazine serves just one purpose…to be opened.  Design has the majority to do with that happening, just like the importance of the headline of this post.

Next steps?

  • Define the role of your content producer, and the mix between original art and stock photography.
  • Include images in all your blog posts.
  • Review all your content to make sure that it is visually appealing.
  • Tag all your online images with meta-tags and captions when possible (millions of searches per day are image searches).
And last but not least…
  • Build time into your content process so that design doesn’t become a last-minute operation.