SEO

When and where to redirect?

This week has raised some questions regarding when to use 301 redirects and where users should be redirected if a user comes across an error page (a 404 page).

Sheffield Floods and SEO: a strange combination

Yesterday was a strange day. It all started when I received a text with a simple statement: ‘Sheffield’s flooded’. Not something you want to hear when you’re heading home there in an hour. However, I dismissed it. Surely the ramblings of an over-dramatic girlfriend?

It wasn’t – you may have seen it on the news. Well, I got on my train, sat and waited to be taken under water to the place I call home. Except it didn’t happen, as everyone suddenly remembered trains aren’t supposed to go under water and hence it was cancelled. We were then told that local trains were still running. Marvelling at the sudden transformer-like ability of local trains to turn into boats, I headed over to the platform, where I met an American who was trying to get to Sheffield for some university-related event. We got on the train and headed towards Waterworld, talking about our jobs to pass the time.

It’s amazing what you can pick up simply by talking to someone with a different role in life. The American, a university lecturer, explained to me about some issues they were having with the University website. Apparently they had recently re-launched their business school but, they were having problems with their results in search engines for targeted search terms. The previous incarnation of the business school had closed down in 1999, but the news story reporting the closure appears top of the current search results for their targeted search terms. Therefore, people were searching for the well-publicised school, stumbling upon this news story and ringing up to ask why the school had closed already.

The moral to this story: always keep tabs on your old pages. Some SEO’s prefer to keep old content in the directory – an indexed page with old content that could still lead to a valued visitor is better than a valued visitor lost. However, as demonstrated by my American flood-victim, sometimes old content is more trouble than it’s worth.

We made it to Sheffield and lived to spread this wisdom.

Will Google buy Twitter?

A question that everyone wants to know the answer to: will search engine giant Google buy Twitter?

Some argue that even if the deal doesn’t happen, Google should take a leaf out of Twitter’s book. Twitter’s micro-blogging site allows real-time updates and search, taking advantage of the fact that users are becoming increasingly expectant that online news and information be updated in real-time.

Though Eric Schmidt, Google’s chief executive, argued to the contrary, Twitter may have exposed the fact that in some cases speed is valued more highly than quality.

How does Google deal with this? Well the simple answer is: perhaps it should find some way to list some of its results by speed. New stories could be listed in order of who got there first. Or by which was the last to be updated. This of course throws up lots of difficulties, but Google should probably accept that in some cases speed could one day be king and find a way to accommodate it. They could just by add an extra option that allows users to rank results by speed instead of quality, or even by other factors.

Apparently Google is busy working away on its new tool, Google Squared, which returns results in columns of writing, pictures, videos, adding ‘structured integration’ to the web. This could have huge implications for search, but quality will probably still be the main ranking tool of choice. Let’s see if they remember speed in the future.

Why Using Forums is Good for Site Traffic and SEO

I thought I would make a quick post about the benefits of attaching a forum to your site. Now this most likely applies to large ecommerce sites however it is still worth noting as forums can prove to be very effective in search engine optimisation (SEO).

Have a think about a consumers or even your own search behaviour. Very seldom when we are after a certain product do we search for it in a search engine, go through to a site and then buy it (okay this sometimes does happen especially with sites like Amazon). What I tend to do is research into products I am after and more often than not this research takes me to communities within the World Wide Web. Now this is one half of why having a forum for your site is a good idea.

Canonicalization and SEO

I am currently building up a glossary of terms for the Blueclaw site which I hope to put live soon and was inspired to write a post on canonicalization. Unfortunately I am still trying to come up with a good definition for it so I will stick with the definition of Matt Cutts:

“the process of picking the best URL when there are several choices…”

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