Saturday, August 31, 2013

Compare on-Page SEO of Two or More Pages (Featured SEO Tool)

This week in our “Featured tool” column we are sharing a neat online on-page SEO comparison tool that lets you quickly get an idea of how each of them is optimized and how the on-page tactics differ. Use the tool:



  • To grab top Google results competing with you and compare their on-page tactics

  • To compare your own pages if one seems to be performing better (for an unknown reason)



On-page SEO in numbers


The tool will give you a quick overview of basic on-page stats:



  • Words on each page;

  • “Linked” words on each page;

  • “Unlinked” words on each page;

  • Total links on each page;

  • Page size


basic on-page stats

Basic but essential numbers



Plus you’ll get a bird’s view of most essential meta tags (title and meta description)


(Sub)heading structure


Heading structure of each page (H1-H6 subheadings and their contents)


(Sub)heading structure

The overview of H1-H6 subheadings for each page



On-page keywords (Gold!)


Keyword usage of non-linked words on-page: one-, two- and three-word phrases (This one is gold for identifying ranking differences for internal pages!)


On-page keywords

Most frequent three-word combinations retrieved from each page



On-page links


The tool will list all links it could find on a page and break them into internal and external groups.


Finally the tool will provide you with the full CSS- and HTML-free text for all pages as well as full HTML code for each. Everything on one page!


Author information



Ann Smarty



Ann Smarty is the pro blogger and guest blogger, social media enthusiast.




The post Compare on-Page SEO of Two or More Pages (Featured SEO Tool) appeared first on SEO Chat.


Analyze Google SERPs with Smart Page Keyword Density Tool – Featured This Week!

Today’s featured tool is a smart keyword density analysis utility that you can use to analyze SERPs (search engine results pages)!


The steps:



  • Run a search on Google and copy-paste the results URL

  • Remove s from https of the URL (to make sure the tool can access it)

  • Add &num=100 to the results to make sure the tool has a ton of text to analyze

  • Run the URL through our tool


Suddenly you have the whole list of keyword suggestions to work with:


Google SERPs analysis

Google SERPs analysis



Mind that the tool takes all on-page content and analyzes keyword co-occurrence – which means you get a good glance of your core-term keyword context.


If you scroll a bit, you’ll see further analysis of non-linked content (which in this case means analysis of meta-descriptions and parts of the text Google thought was closest-related to your search term):



Analysis of non-linked part of Google SERPs



Awesome use of an old tool. Can think of any more?


Author information



Ann Smarty



Ann Smarty is the pro blogger and guest blogger, social media enthusiast.




The post Analyze Google SERPs with Smart Page Keyword Density Tool – Featured This Week! appeared first on SEO Chat.


Multi-level Google Suggest Keyword Research: Featured Tool of the Month

Last week we featured Google, Bing, Amazon, Youtube Keyword Suggest Tool that will fetch keyword suggestions for any phrase you put in and, most importantly, it will dig deeper and fetch suggestions for [your phrase + each letter of alphabet] like this:


keyword suggestion


Today’s featured tools also uses Google Suggest as data source but instead of letters, it expands each phrase to the second and third levels like this:


Google suggest - 3 levels


So meet today’s featured tool: Related keywords tool


Start with Level one to get the “core” of what you will be digging deeper to:


core phrases

List of core phrases you will be expanding



Then go to Level two to expand each phrase from the “core” list:


Google suggest results - level 2

Level 2 of keywords



Finally, switch to Level 3 to expend each and every phrase from the second level:


Google Suggest results - level 3

Level 3 of keywords



Now, feel free to download you huge list of phrases and brainstorm!


The sweet thing about that tool is that you actually see what *people tend to type*. Unless many keyword research tool (Google Adwords External being the most popular one), this output won’t be skewed towards commercial phrases. This list is exactly what people are interested in!


Author information



Ann Smarty



Ann Smarty is the pro blogger and guest blogger, social media enthusiast.




The post Multi-level Google Suggest Keyword Research: Featured Tool of the Month appeared first on SEO Chat.


Google, Bing, Amazon, Youtube Keyword Suggest Tool: Featured Tool of the Week

A couple of weeks ago we made our favorite collection of tools public at SEOchat. From now on, I am going to feature one tool a week to bring up all the glory of that section.


Today’s featured tool: Google, Bing, Amazon, Youtube Keyword Suggest Tool


The tool collects as-you-type “suggestions” you would see each time you use any of the above search engines – and to expand the list, it also tries to add each letter of the alphabet after your core keyword for you to have a huge list of phrases.


keyword suggestion


The great thing about the tool is the different nature of search engines that are included. With it, you can see:



  • General search results people tend to type in Google and Bing when starting a search with your core query

  • More commercial results they search for in Amazon

  • More entertaining results they type into Youtube search engines.


Keyword suggest results


Keeping that in mind, the Suggest tool can become a huge brainstorming help (just scrolling through results will give you lots of content ideas)! It can give you come local content ideas as well:


Local results


To navigate the results, click any letter on top of the list.


You can also select any key phrases and run “part two” of the tool that will expand those phrases for you even further:


Expand even more


You can select any phrases and get CPC and search volume for those in “Part 3″ of the tool:


cpc and search volume


Lastly, you can export your final keyword list to keep it for the reference or send to your content team.


If you notice any bugs or have any ideas on how to improve the tool, please use “Feedback” button.


Author information



Ann Smarty



Ann Smarty is the pro blogger and guest blogger, social media enthusiast.




The post Google, Bing, Amazon, Youtube Keyword Suggest Tool: Featured Tool of the Week appeared first on SEO Chat.


Zurker: a Marketing Study

By Terri Wells


Social networks face an uphill struggle when competing against Facebook. Few networks know this quite as well as Zurker. Now eighteen months old, the site welcomes a growing number of members, but has faced a serious struggle simply to get the word out.


You can read my original piece on Zurker, written in February of last year. Then, the social network was less than two months old, and offered its members a unique proposition: own the network to which you belong. Every member earned a vShare – short for virtual share – for every member they referred. These shares would convert to real shares once the corps of Zurker to which the member belonged gave out one million vShares, and the site could be incorporated.


More details about vShares can be found at the link, but the point is, members would actually own the network, and therefore have a say in what it did and didn’t do. Nick Oba, who came up with the idea for Zurker and styles himself as the custodian, emphasizes that there will never be censorship on Zurker. He strongly protects his members’ privacy, allowing them to fine-tune who sees any content they add. He’s also proven fairly responsive to member ideas and requests – at time allows. He is currently Zurker’s only programmer.


Still, with many of the complaints made about certain other networks pertaining to privacy and censorship, you would think Zurker would be better known. And it has grown. In February 2012, it boasted about 10,000 members. Now, its nine separate corps hold nearly 440,000 members; 28,714 members own a total of 347,200 vShares. That’s not bad for a social network that’s been in closed beta since the beginning, and only entered open beta in March of this year.


It has, however, been very challenging. Not the least of the challenges was the interface. It was and still is a work in progress, different enough from Facebook to confuse users. “We started off with a fairly raw product,” Oba admits, but “it has been adapted to how people actually use the social network.” With the addition of Zones about a year ago, Oba made it easy for users to submit ideas and changes. He often comments on these ideas right away, and adds them not long afterwards.


When members see this kind of responsiveness, they get proactive about marketing what they think of as “their” network. So while Oba spent most of 2012 working on the interface and other features, and the press lost interest in covering Zurker, the Zurker Marketing Team (ZMT) spontaneously formed. Made up of active Zurker members, “they worked fairly hard to tell bloggers about Zurker, and were successful in getting at least one prominent blog post,” Oba recalled.


Member marketing is potentially a two-edged sword. On the one hand, what could be better than word-of-mouth marketing? On the other hand, you can’t really control the ways that your members promote you – and it might start looking like spam to some people. That’s not the only problem, alas; a Wired UK post by Lea Simpson in May 2012 skewered both Zurker and Oba, and the company is still trying to live it down.


So what about hiring a professional marketer? Public relations firms are pretty expensive for a company that is trying to be financed only by its members. You see, members can also buy vShares, but nobody can buy more than 500; they cost $1 per share. Oba has managed to code and keep the network mostly up and running for around $120,000 since he started. “We were supposed to hire a publicist…and when I informed the ZMT about that, it effectively took the wind out of that initiative (unfortunately the hire didn’t work out),” Oba explained.


Still, Zurker does have a reasonable media pack, courtesy of the ZMT. The lesson here would be to try to work with any members promoting your business, and not at cross purposes.


Some businesses run contests to encourage member activity and get new members. Zurker tried this as well, but Oba proclaimed it “a total disaster.” The contest involved getting some members to sponsor iPads and holding a drawing; members would be entered to win an iPad if they got five “Zurks,” the social site’s more friendly alternative to Facebook’s “Likes.” But according to Oba, “everyone associates ‘win an iPad’ with spam. There was no noticeable uptick in signups or activity as a result of this promo.” One can almost hear a sign of exasperation in Oba’s words as he states that “That’s the last time I ever try to bribe people to show up with shwag.”


So what about other, more conventional means of promotion? Oba notes that they tried advertising, first on a newsletter, and then on blogs on SocialSpark. While the newsletter brought a lot of clicks, Oba was not happy with the conversion rate. “People weren’t taking us seriously because they came via an ad,” Oba elaborated. SocialSpark was better, but it wasn’t worth the expense, as it is “better suited for manufacturers advertising actual consumer products the bloggers can give away to their readers.”


What is the lesson here? According to Oba, “what we learned is that advertising is not cost-effective for spreading the word about a social network. It’s very surprising that Facebook still advertise heavily on AdWords/AdSense.”


As a result of these lessons, Zurker has actually shifted away from marketing and advertising. Oba says that they’re now focused on building a better product, building a better community, and reaching out to the media. That last has been particularly tricky, as the site is old enough to not be “new” anymore in the media’s eyes, so possibly not quite so buzzworthy.


Still, Zurker has come back; a look at the numbers tells the story. While Oba admits that the majority of people sign up and disappear, when I returned to the community after a long absence, it was clearly more vibrant than before.


My impetus to return was the result of what may have been Oba’s best “marketing” yet: gently nudging old members with several emails, and then threatening to take back their vShares if they didn’t respond. He also installed a Zurker owner rating system to show activity levels. It displays publicly, to the left of the owner’s name, as a colored circle. If it’s green, it means you’ve “zurked” something at least once a day for the past seven days, and you’re in good standing. There are several other levels: yellow (subpar), amber (poor), red (critical), and grey (new owners who are pending). At the red level, owners risk having their vShares frozen, docked, or forfeited altogether.


This approach met with some ill will among some members and owners, understandably. But in coming back, some rediscovered why they’d signed up in the first place. The thing is, even with what many have called a “clunky” interface, Zurker seems to encourage interaction, and the sharing and discovery of things you won’t necessarily on a social network on which you know everyone.


Because you can click on your own list of interests to find others who’ve listed that interest as well, it’s really easy on Zurker to find people with whom you might want to connect. And thanks to Zones, which work a little like Twitter hashtags, it’s also easy to find interesting posts and photos with which to interact. Because people can reply to comments (they can be nested up to 12 layers deep), it’s easy to interact, even if you don’t know the commenter or poster in person. And because so many on Zurker don’t know other members personally, many of the members actively enjoy reaching out to others and making new online friends.


Make no mistake, though; it’s the member buy-in, on several levels, that’s really helping. When people feel like they own the network and have a say in it, they will go out of their way to help newbies find their footing. That happens a fair bit now on Zurker, and there are groups spontaneously organizing on the site to encourage it even more (by trying to maintain a presence on the Help channel, for instance).


Oba acknowledges this; he even credits it with why Zurker seems to be making a comeback even after the initial buzz wore off. “Getting initial buzz is not that hard if you have a good concept and half-decent implementation, and most start-ups do manage to get to that stage,” he notes. “Surviving the initial spike and going for a hockey stick is much harder. In our case, we came back even though the initial buzz petered out…because the members have a vested interest in the project.” Oba is certain that “that wouldn’t have happened” if they were just users. And he may be on to something here. Time will tell. One thing is certain: Zurker is still around after a year and a half, with a more vibrant community than you’d expect for a social network with one developer and $120,000 of crowd funding from its members. That’s a respectable achievement.


Author information



Terri Wells



Terri Wells






The post Zurker: a Marketing Study appeared first on SEO Chat.


5 Ways to Repackage Content Into Media

There is a trick to managing content that a lot of people don’t know: repackaging it. You can take those blog posts or articles and turn them into something new and exciting, converting the format into other forms of media for wider appeal. Just making a single piece of content can be re-used several times, and then re-shared again to capture the attention of a whole new audience.


Doing this is a lot easier than you might think. It just takes a little effort and innovation, and you are on your way!


1. Videos


Tool: Screenr (online and free!)


You can make a video with nothing more than a voice over, or even a text representation of your post. If you really want to get professional you can do an actual tutorial, using either a video capture of you showing how something is done on your computer, or through a recording of you doing something in real life. Video sites like YouTube and Vimeo are perfect for hosting them, and it will gain a lot of attention this way.


2. Viral Image


With the popularity of image sharing (and the growing importance of image thumbnails in social media snippets), it only makes sense to convert your text into a cool image and use it to make your content spread. Take a look how Quoto does that with their “Picture quotes” section:


Picture quotes


Tools: How to quote using text-to-image tools


Bonus: Infographics


Piktochart


A popular way people repackage content these days is through infographics. These do require some graphic design know-how and artistic ability, but don’t worry. If you don’t know how to make an infographic, there are people out there that can be hired freelance to do it for you. Or, for simple graphics, you can try a tool that helps you make them yourself.


Tools like Piktochart and Infogr.am are easy to use and have a ton of features to customize it to exactly what you want. These are social media powerhouse pieces, and very shareable on Facebook, Twitter, Google+ and Pinterest, to name a few.


3. Slideshows


Tool: Haiku Deck (free!)


For repackaging on your site, or offering them on another site, you can make a visual slideshow. Just break your post down into bullet points, then find a picture to use for each one. These can be your own images/screencaps, or stock photos. Offer context with information about each in the description, but let the photos do the rest of the talking for you.


4. Comics


Tool: Strip Generator


This one is a little more silly, but it works. Break your content down to the bare essentials and draw up some fun cartoons. Not only are these a great way to repackage a post, but they are widely shared and can be entertaining, as well. They are also great for sites like Pinterest, just as infographics are. Not to mention, they make excellent portfolio pieces that show off your creative diversity.


5. Podcasts


Tool: Podcast Producer


More blogs have been using this one lately, and I think it is a great idea. Plenty of readers are short on time or have to multitask. So having an alternate way to enjoy content that is more passive works well to keep their attention. Have posts offered in podcast form, just a simple recording of you reading off the content. You can offer it for download, or have a media player on the site that lets them listen to multiple posts in a row without taking the time to queue them up themselves.


Bonus! Make an eBook! – This one isn’t quite in line with the other suggestions, but is still a great idea. Take a bunch of your posts and repackage it as an ebook. It takes some editing, but it works well for sharing a lot of content in one place.


Do you have any ideas for repackaging content into media? Let us know in the comments!


Image Credits: 1, 2.


Author information



Ann Smarty



Ann Smarty is the pro blogger and guest blogger, social media enthusiast.




The post 5 Ways to Repackage Content Into Media appeared first on SEO Chat.


Friday, August 30, 2013

Why Google Wants to Know About Small Websites That Aren't Ranking Well

Do you have a small website that isn't performing as well in Google's search results as you think it should? Google's Matt Cutts is asking small website owners to submit sites and explain why they deserve to outrank other websites on Google.

New on Twitter: Lead Generation Cards for All Advertisers; Conversation View

Twitter was busy this week with two announcements. First, Twitter announced that it has made Lead Generation Cards available to all advertisers. Meanwhile, Twitter made conversations easier to follow by putting tweets in chronological order.

Link Building 101: How to Conduct a Backlink Analysis

Being able to perform a thorough backlink analysis is a fundamental element to any link building campaign. What's more, running backlink analyses can help develop your fundamental knowledge of links, link building strategies, and link quality.

Keyword Mining: An Interview With SES San Francisco Speaker Bill Hunt

At SES San Francisco, Bill Hunt will show you how to mine your search keywords and social data for new revenue opportunities. Here, Hunt shares some insights on where to find data and some tips and tricks for getting started with keyword research.