Author Archive

Ever-changing Google.co.uk results

Changes in the Google.co.uk results seem to be becoming ever-more frequent – at first we noticed big changes from one day to the next, then changes from morning to afternoon, now we are seem to be experiencing changes from one minute to the next!

I searched for a term this morning and picked out the site I wanted at the bottom of the first page. Then refreshed and it was at second from top on the second page. Then my colleague searched for the same term and it was on the bottom of the first page in his results.

Seven Simple Steps to Onsite Optimisation

These seven steps assume you’ve been given a fully finished site to optimise and you don’t have much time! Follow them and you can’t go far wrong.

1. Decide which pages will focus on which terms

This is crucial. Choose no more than a handful of terms per page. I am a believer that landing pages are for SEO as well as PPC (those who disagree can berate me in comment section below). Ensure this strategy does not become confused, with more than one page focusing on exactly the same key phrase - focusing on longer-tailed key phrases is fine though.

2. Alter page titles

Put priority terms at the front end of the title and make sure they are written with word proximity in mind. The closer together the words within the title, the better the effect on the ranking of the phrase combining those words. For example, the title ‘One two three’ is likely to have better rankings for the phrase ‘one two’ than the phrase ‘one three’. Also, phrases that are entered after the first 60-70 characters will be far less effective than those within the first 60-70 characters.

3. Write keyword rich content

Don’t over-do it on the key phrases but make sure there are a couple of each in there. At least 250-300 words on each landing page is best, though every little helps.

4. Ensure there is no duplicate content

Make sure there is only one version of each page – use .htaccess to redirect and robots.txt to exclude where necessary. Ensure identical content isn’t elsewhere on the web with use of Copyscape or simply by copying and pasting the text into Google. Make sure there is only one version of your homepage – Google views http://yoursite.com, http://www.yoursite.com, http://www.yoursite.com/index.html and http://yoursite.com/index.html as 4 different pages. Make sure it knows which one you prefer by using Google Webmaster Tools and the .htaccess file.

5. Insert relevant headings

Make sure there are headings on the page containing the key terms - but also ensure they do not exactly match the page titles.

6. Insert relevant meta tags

Write an interesting 120 character-long meta description mentioning relevant key terms. Ensure that the meta keywords tag does not mention anything that isn’t actually mentioned in the body of your content.

7. Upload sitemaps

Xml sitemap is vital to inform Google about your site structure and URLs. Html sitemap is useful.

What is Ruby On Rails?

Ruby on Rails is a full stack framework that enables the creation of database driven websites and applications. Ruby on Rails is revolutionising the web industry. It enables programmers to create web applications in a better structured, highly productive environment and one that lends itself to agile practices (small iterations, great customer communication, and evolving software) and full application testing (you know your website works before you release it!).

One of the great aspects of rails is that it is open source software. This means to the developer that there is a great active community providing support, additional plug ins, and bug fixes very quickly. To the business owner it means no licence fees to pay, low setup costs and hosting is kept to a minimal as Ruby on Rails applications are usually hosted on Linux (an open source operating system).

The Ruby on Rails community is fast expanding and Rails itself is in a stage of maturity now where it is seeing widespread adoption across the board, from start-ups to large blue chip organisations and governmental departments.

One of the more well known sites on Rails is twitter, which was originally written on Ruby on Rails. Many of the top 10 facebook applications were written in Rails, and companies in the UK using rails include the BBC, Sun Microsystems, JP Morgan, CapGemini, Amazon to name a few.

Whatever you may need to do, from making a facebook application to creating a social network, to an e-commerce site, to Software as a Service, or corporate internal applications, the Ruby on Rails framework is a very solid and robust interface to build on.

Guest post from Jason Green of Dynamic50 - Boutique Web Design and Development in Ruby on Rails

Is Google too awkward?

It‘s understandable that Google doesn’t like to offer too much help to those mystified by its algorithm. If it let all the details out then providing users with a valued list of results will become almost impossible. But is it just sometimes too…awkward? And could this be a chink in its armour in the future?

Its ‘awkwardness’ stems from its lack of communication and facelessness. This has not gone unnoticed though – right from the beginning it has changed their logo to reflect current events in an attempt to connect with its audience. And it has wheeled out Matt Cutts in order to give the organisation a human outlet for problem solving for those attempting to maximise the opportunities that the Google search model presents. Plus, those within the realm of Google Adwords can access a representative for help.

Google.co.uk IS broken

Google appear to have rolled out an update to Google.co.uk before it was ready. According to Matt Cutts the update is an attempt to integrate .com results into the searches into results for the option ‘the web’. However, it seems to have brought free reign so that a huge number of international domains are appearing in the SERPs.

Try searching ‘motor forum’ and you will see what people mean when they are saying that the results are broken.

The problem behind this experimentation by Google is that they have never fully defined the options ‘the web’ and ‘pages from the UK (or any other country)’ options properly – the results are usually much the same in both options, with .co.uk domains generally enjoying a slight preference in ‘the web’. Many pages of multi-national interest are .com so Google have decided to even things up a bit to fulfil their ‘expectation’ criteria.

I should take a minute to explain this a bit – Google aim to return the result that most users expect to find. So if they search for ‘Barack Obama’ in a search that covers the web, they probably expect to find a biography page about Barack Obama, possibly on the Whitehouse website or on Wikipedia.

However this seemed to be working perfectly fine before - .com results were showing up in the expected places. In my opinion, anyway. Now my expectations are being dashed in quite a few searches.

I search ‘blinds’ expecting to see a raft of companies selling blinds. Now I see there’s a Telegraph article about Dragons’ Den and an American software company selling something called ‘window blinds’, presumably for Microsoft Windows.

Hopefully they’ll stop experimenting and my expectations will be restored – including the expectation that Google don’t mess up.

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