Wednesday, August 31, 2016
Honest SEO Master Class Review
Honest SEO Master Class Review
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JafCJ7gm1Bg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDoaMgqycmE
Best SEO Master Class Review
Best SEO Master Class Review
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uw84fOQDZFw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDoaMgqycmE
Real SEO MasterClass Review
Real SEO MasterClass Review
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F8oOT6pAFZU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDoaMgqycmE
Get Your Seattle Exploration on at MozCon 2016!
Posted by EricaMcGillivray
MozCon is fast approaching us! On September 12-14-just two weeks away-1,400 online marketers will descend on Seattle, ready to learn about SEO, content, Google Tag Manager, conversion rate optimization, and so much more. We've got fewer than 60 tickets left, so grab yours now.
If you haven't done so, check out all the learning! This post is geared toward the things you can do when MozCon sessions aren't happening.

Places you'll want to go as recommended by Mozzers
While you're in Seattle, we want to make sure you have a fabulous time. Seattle in September is beautiful. It's still sunny outside, and it's the time of year people come to Seattle and then want to move here. So we've complied a list of great activities and restaurants:
Sights

"Incredible views of the city, float planes landing overhead, Space Needle in the background, Ivar's Clam Chowder down the street, bikes all over the place."
"This is my favorite place in all of Seattle! Stroll around the park and stop in the Seattle Asian Art Museum and the conservatory, then climb to the top of the water tower for an incredible view. You can also walk through the graveyard and see Bruce Lee and Brandon Lee's grave. After all that walking, hop over to the adorable and delicious Volunteer Park Cafe."
"Amazing views, has a mini gravel beach, and lots of park space. Great for running and cycling. I ride my bike along EBT nearly everyday to Moz, and I fall in love with city over and over again."
"Alki is a beautiful walk with a spectacular view of Puget Sound and the Olympic Mountains. It's got some good restaurants, and even a little history as the site of the original settlement."
"If you've never been to the Pacific Northwest (or even if you have!), Discovery Park on a clear day is a great place to see the Olympic Mountains, Puget Sound, Mt. Rainier, and to get some quality forest walking done all in one fell swoop. Plus, it's 20 minutes from downtown! (Pro tip: For the easiest view access, park in the lot on W Emerson just before 43rd Ave W.)"
"People of every ilk converge to exercise, feed ducks, play with dogs, and covet the dogs of others."
Activities, tours, and museums

"What a great way to hear about and experience early-Seattle's history!"
"Seattle is surrounded by water and mountains. The ferry is the easiest way to experience that scenery. The view of the city is amazing too!"
"It is special to me because I've only been to Seattle once, as I work remotely in the UK. It was a joy the see how strong the love for pinball is in Seattle. The Pinball Museum houses the world's biggest pinball machine, and it is really something to behold; it's like hugging a dining room table."
Restaurants and bars

"Laid back, good music, cheap food, and nice people."
"If you are a vegetarian (or love vegetarian food), the Happy Hippy Burger is a must. It is not only the best veggie burger in Seattle, but it's the best I have ever had. Cyclops also has great drinks and food for the omnivores, too."
"This hole in the wall has it all! Pie Bar serves up warm, freshly baked slices of heaven with a pint of bliss. Savory pies, sweet pies, pietinis, craft spirits, and beer...all nestled in an elegant, cozy venue where you won't have to shout over a crowd 3-hipsters-deep to order. And if you're done with your pie and ready for some pinball and arcade games, John John's Game Room is directly next door!"
"This hip little eatery has some awesomely tasty foods, a sweet little private back patio, a laidback atmosphere, and awesome drinks. Plus, it's right in the heart of Capitol Hill, one of my favorite 'hoods in the city."
Bonus! Lightning suggestions:
- The Fat Hen
- Smith
- Bottega Italiana
- Cafe Turko
- Shorty's
- Omega Ouzeri
- Sushi Kashiba
- Métier Seattle
- General Porpoise Doughnuts
- Sizzle Pie
- Holy Mountain Brewing
- Herb and Bitter
- Lionhead
- Optimism Brewery
- Meet the Moon
- Bar Melusine
Brian Childs' recommendation corner
"I put this Google map together for friends visiting the city. Includes lots of breweries, bars, restaurants, and things to do: Get the info!"
Official MozCon evening events
For all our evening events, make sure to bring your conference badge AND your US ID or your passport.
Monday Night MozCrawl
From 7:00pm - 10:00pm, you can head to all the stops at your own pace and in any order. Visit all the stops, fill out your punch card, and return it to the swag store on Tuesday morning to enter to win a golden Roger!
- Barca hosted by Unbounce
- Saint John's hosted by Buffer
- Comet Tavern hosted by SimilarWeb
- Linda's Tavern hosted by WordStream
- Still Liquor hosted by Whitespark
- Unicorn hosted by BuzzStream

Tuesday MozCon Ignite
If you're looking for networking, this is event for you! Join us at from 7:00-10:00pm at McCaw Hall for a night of networking and five-minute, Ignite-style passion talks from your fellow attendees. This year, our talks will range from information and unique to heartwarming and life changing. You don't want to miss this MozCon night.
- 7:00-8:00pm Networking
- 8:00-8:05pm Introduction with Geraldine DeRuiter
- 8:05-8:10pm Help! I Can't Stop Sweating - Hyperhidrosis with Adam Melson at Seer Interactive
- 8:10-8:15pm A Plane Hacker's Guide to Cheap *Luxury* Travel with Ed Fry at Hull.io
- 8:15-8:20pm Life Lessons Learned as a Special Needs Parent with Adrian Vender at Internet Marketing Inc
- 8:20-8:25pm How to Start an Underground Restaurant in Your Home with Nadya Khoja at Venngage Inc.
- 8:25-8:30pm Embracing Fear, Potential Failure, and Plain Ol' Discomfort with Daisy Quaker at AMSOIL INC.
- 8:30-8:35pm How Pieces of Paper Can Change Lives with Anneke Kurt Godlewski at Charles E. Boyk Law Offices, LLC
- 8:35-8:40pm Is Your Family Time for Sale? with Michael Cottam at Visual Itineraries
- 8:40-9:20pm Networking with desserts and refreshments
- 9:20-9:25pm Prison and a Girl that Loves Puppies with Caitlin Boroden at DragonSearch
- 9:25-9:30pm Embracing Awkward: The Tale of a 5' 10" 6th Grader with Hannah Cooley at Seer Interactive
- 9:35-9:40pm Finding Myself in Fiction: LGBTQUIA Stories with Lisa Hunt at Moz
- 9:40-9:45pm Wooly Bits: Exploring the Binary of Yarn with Lindsay Dayton LaShell at Diamond + Branch Marketing Group
- 9:45-9:50pm How a Cartoon Saved My Life with Steve Hammer at RankHammer
- 9:50-9:55pm Flood Survival: Lessons from the Streets of ATL with Sarah Lively at Nebo Agency
- 9:55-10:00pm Hornets, Soba, & Friends: A Race in Japan with Kevin Smythe at Moz

Wednesday Night Bash!
From 7:00-12:00 midnight: Bowling, pool, Jenga, a slow-motion booth, a photo booth, karaoke, cupcakes, food, drinks, and more! You don't want to miss our annual bash.
Rent some bowling shoes and go for a turkey. Sing your heart out just like you recently joined Journey. Snap photos with your friends while wearing silly hats. Show off how much of a ringer you are at pool. Get into a chicken strip-eating contest. Hang out with your new MozCon friends one last time, and celebrate all the learning!

Birds of a Feather lunch tables
If you want to spend your lunchtime getting great advice from your fellow attendees about online marketing or meet people in your specialty, check out our birds of a feather lunch tables:
Monday, September 12
- Women in Digital hosted by Heather Physioc at Tentacle Inbound, LLC
- Search Marketing for Nonprofit Organizations hosted by Sheena Schleicher at Schleicher Marketing
- Content MArketing for E-Commerce hosted by Kane Jamison at Content Harmony
- Local SEO hosted by Kristina Kledzik at Rover
- Topical Analysis hosted by Michael Cottam at Visual Itineraries
- In-house SEO hosted by Andy Odom at Santander Consumer USA
- Making CRO Work for Your SEO hosted by Patrick Delehanty at Marcel Digital
Tuesday, September 13
- Local Search hosted by George Freitag at Moz
- Growth Hacking hosted by Brittanie MacLean at Realty Austin
- Continuing Marketing Education hosted by Rachel Goodman Moore at Moz
- Marketing Automation hosted by Ed Fry at Hull.io
- How to Smartly Mix Search and Content to Aid Overall Business Strategy by Ronell Smith at Ronell Smith Consulting
- E-Commerce SEO hosted by Everett Sizemore at Inflow
- SERP Features hosted by Jon White at Moz
- Technical SEO hosted by Bill Sebald at Greenlane Search Marketing
Wednesday, September 14
- Google Penalties hosted by Michael Cottam at Visual Itineraries
- Advanced SEO hosted by Britney Muller at Moz
- Marketing for USA Manufacturing Companies hosted by Crystal Hunt at Grassroots Fabric Pots
- Work-Life Balance hosted by Keri Morgret at Inbound.org
- Local Search hosted by George Freitag at Moz
- Marketing Automation hosted by Ed Fry at Hull.io
- Content Marketing hosted by Trevor Klein at Moz

Join the Fitbit Group
Track your steps while networking and cheer on your fellow attendees!
Play Roger Patrol!
Ready for some friendly competition between your fellow attendees? We've built a special MozCon game just for you. You'll play as starship, part of Roger Patrol! Try and beat the top score on Roger Patrol video game by zapping asteroids, destroying evil spaceships, and protecting Roger Mozbot's universe. We'll provide a download link for attendees, and you'll also find three arcade-style boxes of the game throughout the MozCon venue.
Visit our Partner Hub, get your photo taken with Roger, and more arcade-style fun
As you head up to registration, entering MozCon, you won't want to miss all the activities around you and happening when the conference isn't in active session.
Say hello to our Partners
Every sulk through an exhibitor hall with your head down like you're in middle school again? Us too. Which is why at MozCon, we wanted to do something different. Our invite-only partners are not only respectful, but we've vetted their activities and their products to make sure they are useful to you. So say hello, and we promise you might instead get a postcard to send home, a t-shirt, or a special MozCon coin.

Our great partners:
Stop each day at the Swag Store!
After the first day, Registration will be transformed into a swag store. You don't want to miss out on these goodies. On Tuesday, you'll be able to pick up your official MozCon 2016 t-shirt. On Wednesday, you'll get your own Lego Roger.

Meet Mozzers to give feedback or Ask an SEO
Make sure to stop by the Moz Hub. We'll be there to answer your questions about Moz Pro and Moz Local. Learn about our latest offerings and updates. Get insights into how best to use the tools.
And by popular demand, we've added Ask an SEO. Mozzers and Associates with expertise in SEO will be there to answer your burning search questions and kickstart you with new ideas for your search campaigns.
Play the Roger claw machine
We're bringing back the plushie claw machine! If you missed out getting one of our plushie Roger Mozbots, or you just need another as a small child or pet decided Roger was their best friend, now's your chance. In order to play, you must visit one of our Partners or the Moz Hub for a special shiny coin. Then take that coin to the claw machine!
Don't worry, we've put a TAGFEE spell on this machine, so you may find it a little easier than the ones in the malls of your childhood. ;)
Take a photo with Roger Mozbot
A MozCon tradition you won't want to miss. Get your annual photo (or maybe it's your first!) taken with the cuddliest robot in the galaxy, Roger Mozbot.

Donate to charity, on us!
Open up your Monday swag kit and inside you'll find $5 Roger bucks. You get to donate this to one of three charities (charities selected by Mozzers):
- PAWS - people helping animals
- International Justice Mission - a global organization that protects the poor from violence in the developing world
- Seattle Children's Hospital - to prevent, treat, and eliminate pediatric disease
Roger Mozbot will then count the bucks and write a check to each charity.
Push pin world map
Ever play pin the tail on the donkey? Well, this is like that, but pin the spot where you are from, minus the blindfold.
In Seattle on Thursday post-MozCon? We have MozPlex tours.
Every wonder where Roger Mozbot lives? Or heard of the stories of cereal bars and rooms named after starships and robots? Is is true that Mozzers have sit/stand desks? Don't miss out on our Office Tours on Thursday 9/15. Sign up for your time slot.

Even more fun in Seattle
Don't miss our posts from years past, which are full of restaurant, activity, and more recommendations: 2015, 2014, 2013, and 2012.
Activities happening around Seattle from Saturday, September 10 - Sunday, September 18
- September 9-11, San Gennaro Festival in Georgetown
- September 10, Thai Festival Seattle
- September 11, Live Aloha Hawaiian Cultural Festival
- September 11, Second Saturday Art Walks
- September 11, Historic Tour of the Moore Theater
- September 15, Columbia City Art Walk
- September 15, Seattle Center's “Best Damn Happy Hour”
- September 16, University District Art Walk
- September 17-18, Fiestas Patrias – Latin American Independence Festival
- September 17-18, Seattle Mini Maker Faire
- September 17, Ballard Civic Orchestra's “Celebrating Hispanic Cultural Heritage”
- September 17, White Center Art Walk
- September 17, Historic Tour of the Neptune Theater
If you're looking to connect with fellow attendees, please join our MozCon Facebook Group.
Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read!
Combining Email and Facebook for a Dynamite Ecommerce Marketing Campaign
Posted by andrewchoco
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 Moz, Inc.
Most people view email marketing and social advertising as two separate entities, and I'll be honest, I used to think that as well. However, I've discovered that combining multiple different avenues for a coherent marketing campaign yields some pretty impressive results.
We've tried this tactic before at Directive Consulting, combining SEO and PPC; but in this blog post, I'm going to break down a few ways to combine email and social advertising for multi-channel success.
More specifically, you'll learn:
- How to create custom and lookalike audiences on Facebook from an email list
- Best practices for launching email and social campaigns simultaneously
- How we used this tactic to increase overall sessions and revenue
- Some additional strategies to take your ecommerce campaigns to the next level
Using email lists to create Custom Audiences on Facebook
Most (if not all) ecommerce stores require an email address when completing a purchase, and many times you can see what item the person bought. Keeping an organized and segmented email list is the first step to social advertising success. If you're an online clothing store that specializes in creative t-shirts for men and women, create individual lists segmenting categories (e.g., sports, funny, and cute) and gender. If you're using a CRM such as Hubspot, Mailchimp, or Salesforce, you can export these contact lists as .CSV files and then upload those to Facebook under the “Audiences” section using Ads Manager.

When logging onto your Ads Manager or Business Manager account, go to your ad account and select the drop-down hamburger menu in the top left-hand corner.
If "Audiences" doesn't appear in the “Frequently Used” section, hit "All tools" and you'll find it under the “Assets” section.


After clicking on “create custom audience,” you'll need to select the “customer file” section and then “choose a file or copy” and you'll be prompted to upload your .CSV file into Facebook.
Facebook will then match up the emails with actual Facebook users (you can expect anywhere from a 20% - 70% match rate), but with ecommerce those numbers tend to be on the higher side.
Using email lists to create Facebook Audiences
Another great feature of Facebook ads is the ability to create lookalike audiences from previously uploaded email lists. Facebook will match up the corresponding profiles of your email lists with a broader group of people who have similar profiles based on interests, demographics, and behaviors. As long as your email list consists of more than 100 people, Facebook will be able to create a lookalike audience. Obviously, though, the more people you have in the original email list, the more similar the lookalike audience will be (because Facebook will have more data to pull from.)

When you create your lookalike audience, you select a country and choose anywhere from 1% - 10% of a country's population.

But you don't have to stop there. Once you have a lookalike audience (we usually use the 10% option so we capture the most people), you can layer additional targeting on top of the lookalike. For the clothing store example, you could take the audience of 20 million and add additional behavior targeting of men's fashion buyers and online buyers. Now that's a specific audience!
Launching simultaneous campaigns for maximum reach
Now how can you tie together email marketing and social advertising for optimal reach?
Anytime an ecommerce shop launches a promotion or sale, they send out an email blast.
I usually check my email in the morning, see the promotion, and then promptly forget about it five minutes later. It's common knowledge that every opportunity needs multiple touches before they end up converting to a sale, but sending three emails a day promoting a sale is a good way to lose a lot of subscribers.
The solution? Launch a social promotion targeted at your specific email list. Then ramp up the budget to ensure that every person sees your ad at least once during the campaign. A good way to do this is by looking at the estimated reach when creating an ad campaign and making sure your budget is high enough that the estimated reach per day matches up with the amount of people on your email list.

We used this tactic with a client of ours who sells collectable banknotes from countries all around the world.
Their most popular is the Zimbabwean $100 trillion dollar banknote, so they ran a promotion for 10% off. We didn't segment the audiences like I mentioned earlier, because they were only promoting one country's banknote, but we did create two different ad images as well as a carousel ad so we could target everyone in the list with multiple products for the same price.

While you may think this is an obnoxious ad and the red circle and arrow is overkill, this ad actually performed the best out of all of them, generating over 180 clicks in three days with a CTR of 8.7%. Little touches like this really draw in your audience's attention and can lead to much higher engagement.


Carousel ads are great for ecommerce shops because they can show off multiple products without increasing the price of your campaigns. We recently switched over to carousel ads for a client of ours who builds custom fences and had 3,000% more sessions on the site from the carousel ads.
We launched these ads for a three-day period while the sale was running and combed it with an email blast that went out at the beginning of the sale. These are the results we saw when comparing the week of the promotion to the previous week:

We saw our sessions go up, as well as the pages per session and average session duration. We didn't have a single transaction from Facebook the previous week, but had four during the sale, generating enough revenue to easily cover the cost of that campaign.
Another interesting thing we saw was that the email didn't directly lead to any sales. I'm not saying it had no effect on the sales that week, but only launching an email campaign wouldn't have had the same impact as combining these two platforms and working together to create additional touches throughout the sale period.
Additional strategies
1. Use lookalike audiences
For the above example, we only targeted our custom audience of email subscribers (the sale was a special promo just for those customers). But taking it even further, creating a broader audience from the lookalike audience would have been a great audience to target, as well.
What better way to introduce your brand and product to a potential customer than immediately offering a sale? You can also further target these audiences to get extremely specific. For our banknote client, our targeted lookalike audience looks something like this:

2. Create a new segmented list for sale buyers
If you're launching a promotion for a sale using this tactic, segment each new email address you receive into its own list titled “sale buyers.” There's a chance these people have been wanting to buy your product all along and finally waited until a sale came along to do it, but more likely, these people are impulse shoppers who made a purchase because of the exclusivity of the deal you're promoting. This now gives you a list of customers that you know make purchases during sales, and you can test out other promotional deals later on. If you don't offer free shipping regularly, have a two-day period when you do, and target these specific people.
3. Use Twitter as another platform to target your audience
Twitter is another social platform that gives you the ability to upload a .CSV of email addresses, and matches up twitter profiles with those corresponding emails.

In the Twitter Ads platform, go to "Tools" and then "Audience manager."

Head over to “Create new audience” and upload your own .CSV, just like you did for Facebook. (A word of warning: You do need 500 or more matches for Twitter to allow you to use the audience for promotions.)
For ecommerce, most people will use their personal email for Twitter as well as buying a product, so this shouldn't be an issue with a big enough email list.
Now it's your turn
Now you're prepared to launch a robust and successful email and social advertising campaign.
Remember, it's important to ensure your budget aligns with the amount of people you're trying to reach, and to use eye-popping images to catch your audience's attention. Let me know in the comments if these tactics worked for you, or if you have any additional strategies for email and social success!
Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read!
Honest SEO MasterClass Review
Honest SEO MasterClass Review
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDoaMgqycmE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDoaMgqycmE
Best SEO MasterClass Review
Best SEO MasterClass Review
Tuesday, August 30, 2016
The Two-Part SEO Ranking Model: Let's Make SEO Simple
Posted by EricEnge
There sure is a lot of interest in SEO ranking factors:

There have been major studies done on this, notably by both Moz and Searchmetrics. These are groundbreaking pieces of research, and if you're serious about SEO, you need to understand what these studies say.
That said, these are too complex for most organizations to deal with. They need a simpler way of looking at things. At Stone Temple Consulting (STC) we deal with many different types of organizations, including some of the world's largest companies, and some of the highest-traffic websites in the world. For most of these companies, understanding that there are 200+ ranking factors does more harm than good.
Why, you ask? So many people I talk to are looking for a silver bullet. They want to hear that they should only change their heading tags on the second Tuesday of every month, except during leap years, when they should do it on the first Tuesday, except in February when they should change it on the third Monday. These distractions end up taking away from the focus on the two things that matter most: building great content (and a great content experience) and promoting it well.
Today's post is going to lay out a basic approach that most companies can use to simplify their thinking about SEO, and keep their focus on the highest priorities.
What Google recently said
Here's what Google Dublin's Andrey Lippatsev said in a Hangout that I participated in on March 23, 2016. Also participating in the Hangout was Ammon Johns, who asked Andrey what the two most important ranking factors are:
Andrey Lippatsev: Yes. Absolutely. I can tell you what they are. It is content and links going into your site.
There we go, that's a start. According to Google, it's links and content that are the two biggest. Hopefully, the idea that content is a big factor is obvious, but below I'll break out more what great content really entails. In addition, you can see some backup for the power of links in the study I recently published on links as a ranking factor.
Should we think of the world as consisting only of these two factors? It's quite simplistic, and possibly too much so, but let's try to simplify this even more. How many organizations would dramatically improve their SEO if they focused on creating great content and promoting it effectively? I can tell you that from my experience these are two things that many organizations simply don't do.
Does that mean that we can take our two factors and put them into a (purely) hypothetical ranking score equation that looks like this?

I actually think that this equation is pretty effective, though it has some limitations and omissions that I'll describe in more detail below. You also need to think about the concept of "great content," that will get a high Content Score, in the correct manner.
What is "great content?"
If we step back and think about what makes up great content, it seems to me that there are three major components that matter:
- Relevancy
- Quality
- The overall content experience
The first part of this is simple. If the content is not relevant to a query, it shouldn't rank for that query, ever. That makes sense, right?
The second part is also pretty simple, and that's the notion of quality. Does it provide information that people are looking for? Is that information relatively unique to your site? Clearly, it makes sense for the quality of the content to matter a lot.
We can combine the notions of quality and relative uniqueness into the notion of material differentiation. Rand covers this brilliantly in his Whiteboard Friday about creating 10X content.
Creating the 220,001st article on how to make French toast is just not going to cut it:

You need to create something new and compelling that also offers a lot of value. That may not be easy, but being the best at something never is.
If you're in a competitive market, it's reasonable to guess that your top competitors are making great, relevant content on topics that matter to their target audience. For the most important queries, it's probable that the top 5 (and maybe more) pieces of content in that space are really, really good (i.e. more comprehensive than other articles on the topic, or brings in new information that others don't have).
The third part encompasses many pieces.
- Is your content well-organized and easy to read?
- Does it effectively communicate its key points? How do people engage with it? If they land on a page on your site that has the answer to their question, can they quickly and easily find that information?
Once again, you'll find that the major competitors that rank in the top of the SERPs all handle this pretty well too.
Let's now take a look at what the role of the content score in ranking might look like:

Note that the Y-axis is "Chances of Ranking," as opposed to "Ranking." Nonetheless, this curve suggests that the Content Score is a big one, and that makes sense. Only the best of the best stuff should rank. It's simple.
Digging a bit deeper on what goes into content quality
But what about title tags? Heading tags, use of synonyms? Page layout and design? Stop and think about it for a moment. Aren't those all either part of creating higher-quality content, or making that content easier to consume?
You bet.
For example, imagine that I wrote this piece of content:

It could be the greatest information in the world, but it's going to be really hard for users to read, and it will probably have terrible user engagement signals. On the other hand, imagine that my content looks like this:

Would you say the quality of one of these pieces of content is higher? I would. The second one is much easier to read, and therefore will deliver more value to users. It will get better engagement, and yes, it will probably get linked to more often.
Why do links get separate treatment?
You could argue that links are just another measurement of content quality, and there is some truth to that, but we give them separate treatment in this discussion for two reasons:
1. They're still the best measurement of authority.
Yes, I know I'm ruffling some feathers now, but this is what my experience after more than 15 years in SEO (and seeing hundreds of SEO campaigns) has taught me. To get and sustain a link, someone has to have a website, has to be willing to modify that website, and they have to be willing to have their site's visitors click on the link to leave their site and go to yours.
That's a pretty material commitment on the linking site's part, and the only incentive they have to do that is if they believe that your content is of value to their site's visitors.
Why not social signals? While I've long argued that they have no impact except for aiding in content discovery, let's for sake of argument say that I'm wrong, and there is some impact here, and explain why social signals can never be a critical part of the Google algo. It's simple: social signals are under the control of third-party companies that can make them invisible to Google on a moment's notice (and remember that Google and Facebook are NOT friends). Imagine Google giving Facebook (or any other 3rd party) the power to break their algorithm whenever they want. Not happening!
2. The power of links should cause different actions on your part.
What is that action? It's called marketing, and within that discipline is the concept of content marketing. Done the right way, these are things you should do to raise the reputation and visibility of your brand.
In fact, this may consume a material amount of your entire company budget. With or without search engines in the world, you've always wanted to do two things:
(1) Make really good stuff, and
(2) market it effectively.
In 2016, and beyond, this will not change.
No doubt, part of attracting great links is to produce great content, but there are other overt actions involved to tell the world about that great content, such as active outreach programs.
Expanding on user engagement
Many have speculated that Google is using user engagement signals as a ranking factor, and that it will increase its investment in these areas over time. For example, what about click-through rate (CTR)? I discuss CTR as a ranking factor here, but to net it out simply, it's just too easy a signal to game, and Google tells us that it uses CTR measurements as a quality control check on other ranking signals, rather than as a direct signal.
You can doubt Google's statements about this, but if you own or publish a website, you probably get many emails a week offering to sell you links via one scheme or another. However, you never get emails offering you CTR ranking schemes. Why is that, you think? It's because even the scammers and spammers don't think it works.
Important note: Rand has done many live CTR tests and a number of these have shown some short-term rankings movement, so CTR could be used in some manner to discover hot trends/news, but still not be a core ranking factor.
What about other user engagement signals? I'd bet that Google is, in fact, doing some things with user engagement signals, though it's hard to be sure what they are. It's not likely to be as simple as bounce rate, or its cousin, pogosticking.

Pogosticking sure seems like a good signal until you realize there are many scenarios where they don't work at all. For example, when users are comparison shopping, they'll naturally hop from site to site.
Finding good user engagement factors that make for really reliable signals is quite hard. Many have speculated that artificial intelligence/machine learning will be used to derive these types of factors. Here are three pieces of content that cover that topic in some detail:
- The Machine Learning Revolution: How it Works and its Impact on SEO, an article here on Moz by yours truly
- SEO in a Two-Algorithm World, a Powerpoint by Rand Fishkin
- The Past, Present, and Future of SEO, an article by Mike Grehan
Information architecture
Having a solid information architecture (IA) that Google can crawl and easily find your content is also a major requirement. In Andrey Lippatsev's response, he undoubtedly presumed that this was in good shape, but it would be wrong to leave this out of this discussion.
At Stone Temple Consulting, we've helped tons of sites improve their organic traffic simply by working on their IA, eliminating excessive page counts, improving their use of SEO tags like rel=canonical, and things of this nature. This is clearly a big factor as well. Usability also feeds into IA, because people need to be able to find what they're looking for on your site.
What I've left out with the two-factor model
First of all, there are other types of results, such as images, videos, and maps results, that are opportunities to get on the first page, but the above discussion is focused on how to rank in regular web search results.
To be fair, even in the regular web results, I've left some things out. Here are some examples of those:
- Local links. I'm not referring to "local pack" listings here. If I search on "digital cameras" right now, in the regular web search results, I'll see some listings for stores near me. Clearly, proximity is a very large factor in ranking those pages.
- Query deserves diversity. An example of this is the query "Jaguar." Chances are that my two-factor algorithm would rank only car sites in the top 10, but Google knows that many people that type that query want information on the animal. So even if the two-factor algo would slant things one way, you'll see some animal-related sites in the top 10.
- In-depth articles. This is a feature that's hard to spot in the search results, but sometimes Google includes in the bottom of the top 10 results some pieces of content that are particularly comprehensive. These are for queries where Google recognizes there's a decent chance that the user is engaging in extensive research on a topic. Here's an example for the query "constitution":

We conducted a small sample review of 200 SERPs and found that about 6% of the results appeared to be from factors such as these. The two-factor model also doesn't account for personalization, but this post is looking at ranking factors for regular search results other than personalization, which, of course, also has a large impact.
Looking for ranking hacks?
OK, I'm going to give you one. Make your content, and the experience of consuming that content, unbelievably good. That's step one. Stick to your knitting, folks, and don't cop out on the effort to make your content stand out. You have no choice if you want to get sustainably positive results from SEO.
Don't forget the overall site and page usability, as that's a big part of what makes your content consumable. This is a critical part of making great content. So is measuring user engagement. This provides a critical feedback loop into what you're doing, and whether or not it's working for your target audience.
Then, and only then, your focus should turn to marketing that will help drive your reputation and visibility, and help attract links to your content. Here it is in a nutshell:
If your content isn't competitive in relevance and quality, links won't help. If it is, links will make the difference.
Your content has to be elite to have a chance to score highly on any given competitive search result. After that, your superior marketing efforts will help you climb to the top of the heap.
Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read!
Monday, August 29, 2016
Should You Be Outsourcing SEO Training for Your Team?
Posted by rachelgooodmanmoore
When first looking to offer something new, most businesses fall in line with one of two schools of thought:
- Build it internally
- Purchase or outsource it
There are pros and cons to both sides of the coin.
Here's an example: Say you're looking to expand the selection of products your company sells. Building a new offering in-house would allow you complete control over the size and shape of the new product. The drawback? Building it yourself usually takes significant internal resources and time. If, instead, you chose to purchase a product from another organization (let's call them Acme Corp) and whitelabel it - or maybe even purchase Acme Corp itself - you'll be able to go to market sooner, but you'll almost certainly have less control over the product you're offering.
The idea of “build internally” or “purchase externally” doesn't just apply to products - it also includes internal programs like market research, sales strategy development, and even professional training. In fact, it includes almost everything that makes up an organization, from its processes to its people.
Think back to the last product (internal or external) your company released. In which camp is your organization? Whether you go the outsourcing or building in-house route depends on your business and the situation at hand. There are arguments for the merits of both, and some organizations employ a mix of multiple strategies.
Let's look at some of the considerations and use cases for why you may want to choose one over the other when it comes to training - in particular, SEO training.
Is SEO training unique?
It's worth examining if (and how) SEO education differs from other flavors of professional training. While SEO training is a different beast than, say, learning to code or how to do business accounting, from my perspective as an online trainer, teaching SEO isn't remarkably different than teaching any kind of digital marketing.

SEO training: a different type of beast.
At basic and intermediate levels, neither SEO nor digital marketing in general are extremely technical (compared to something like learning JavaScript, MySQL, or setting up a Salesforce CRM), nor do they require an MBA or PhD to master. Both are easier with a fundamental understanding of how websites and the Internet work, and both are at their best when backed by real data and at least a dash of creativity.
SEO versus digital marketing training
Do these two actually differ from each other at all? Search engine optimization is a subset of what digital marketing is all about, so they're related. But there are differences, nonetheless. Let's take a closer look:
The training face-off
| Digital Marketing Education | SEO Education |
|---|---|
Focuses on all aspects of how to attract traffic, convert those visitors into leads, and help transform those leads into customers | Mainly focuses on how to best attract visitors |
Covers ways to attract visitors from all sources | Deals almost exclusively with increasing or refining traffic from search engines |
Deals with topics like email marketing, marketing automation, social media, content creation, and beyond | Hones in on topics like keyword research, site architecture, on- and off-page optimization, and analytics (though may also include topics like content creation as they pertain to generating search traffic) |
Typically measures ROI in terms of marketing or sales-qualified leads generated | Most direct ROI numbers are around traffic generated by source (namely search engines or search-influenced sources) |
The right column, for our purposes in this article, is how we'll be defining "SEO training."
Now that we're on the same page with what we mean when discussing SEO training, let's dive into the ten-thousand-dollar question*: should you build and run this type of training in-house, or outsource it?
*Yes, some SEO training programs really do cost that much.
Outsourcing: the benefits
Let's start our tour of outsourcing versus building training in-house by examining the pros of hiring an outside trainer or signing up for an SEO training course:
1. Outsourcing saves time.
Whether it's hours devoted to developing an SEO curriculum, putting together lessons, actually teaching, or following up with trainees after your session, building and delivering from-scratch training can take an enormous amount of time and effort.
Outsourcing means you get hours in your day back, and because the training is built by professionals, the end product may be higher quality than something built internally.
2. Outsourcing can save you money.
Note "can" (and not "will") save you money. If you only need training one (or a few) time(s), or if you have a relatively small group of people enrolled, it can be significantly more cost-effective to outsource training.
On the other hand, if you have a large number of people to train or plan on offering a course on a regular basis (for example, as part of new hire onboarding), it may be worth the upfront cost to develop in-house training.
3. Outsourcing lets you put more budget towards day-to-day operations.
It may sound counterintuitive, but companies that “run lean” or dedicate the lion's share of budget to day-to-day operations may not be able to sacrifice the man hours necessary to develop, deliver, and maintain a training program. Outsourcing one is often significantly less expensive for the scale these organizations need.
4. Don't have an internal expert, but need new internal expertise? No problem.
If you're looking to strengthen existing SEO skills or build your company's SEO expertise from the ground up, but aren't ready to hire a search marketing manager just yet, finding a good SEO training course or bringing in an outside trainer can provide the skills you're looking for.
It's also useful for agencies hoping to offer full SEO services or building an SEO pilot program. Bringing in outside help to train up a few team members on key skills means you don't need to invest in a net new hire for a program with an uncertain future.
5. Outsourced training makes it easier to reach a remote or multi-lingual team.
It's as common to hear about companies expanding to open their first satellite office in Beijing as it is to hear that office is in Boston. Thanks to the Internet, today's world is smaller than ever.
If yours is one of the many companies with international workers or a largely remote workforce, it can be hard to deliver training that's equally accessible and applicable to everyone. In situations like this - and especially if you have a multilingual workforce - outsourcing training that's available in various languages can be a great option.
6. Outsourcing may give you access to accreditations or certifications.
Many online and in-person SEO training programs include some sort of certification of completion or proficiency. If that's a priority, you'll want to purchase an in-person or online program from an organization with industry name recognition that offers a certification.
7. Outsourcing gives you access to the best quality educators.
Whether you're a full-fledged Google algorithm guru or just know your way around a site crawl, no one can argue that you've got some SEO chops. You already know the material, so it should be no trouble to whip up some training based on your expertise... right?
Maybe, but maybe not. “Doing” skills are different than teaching skills; being skilled at SEO doesn't automatically correlate to being skilled at teaching SEO. And, perhaps more importantly, teaching doesn't automatically lead to learning. Just because you have knowledge to share doesn't necessarily mean that you'll be as successful as possible when helping your colleagues actually learn.
One of the biggest benefits of outsourced training is that it gives you access to professional educators, not just folks with practical experience who educate in their free time.
Outsourcing: the drawbacks
Now that we've covered some of the benefits of outsourcing training, let's give in-house training the same treatment. What are cons of relying on a 3rd-party provider for your SEO training needs?
1. Only relying on outsourced education doesn't give you any equity.
No, I'm not talking about link equity. The equity I'm referring to here is, metaphorically, the same kind of equity you get from buying a house versus renting an apartment.
As a renter, you're only paying for access to the property - not an actual stake in it. Buying, on the other hand, may take more effort and investment upfront, but it gives you control (and ownership!) over the actual property itself.
What does this metaphor have to do with in-house versus outsourced training? Only relying on outsourced efforts means you're continually paying someone else for access to their educational property. If you have training needs that span over many employees or many years, this can get very expensive. In those cases, while it may initially be more costly to develop training in-house, it's a better long-term investment because of the 'equity' it provides.
2. Outsourcing training doesn't always scale with growing businesses.
Plan ahead for the long-term: If you're growing your organization and plan on having multiple people involved in creating optimized content for your website, it may be a better long-term investment to build in-house training that grows with your team.
3. Outsourced training generally focuses on best practices and one-size-fits-most processes.
Most training programs center on teaching “best practices” or general strategies. If you have a specific process or way of doing SEO, it may be difficult (if not impossible) for an outside trainer to communicate your optimization process - in your terms, using your tools - to your team. For some organizations, that alone may be enough to tilt the scales towards creating all training in-house.
4. Have specific content needs? Building your own curriculum may be your best bet.
Related to having unique processes, having specific content needs also may mean that outsourcing training isn't the best bet for you. Only want to learn about optimizing content for mobile search engines and advanced link building strategies, but don't want to have to pay for access to 30 other courses to get the two you do? While some training providers can build a fully custom program designed around exactly what you want to learn, many may come as standard “packages” with little flexibility around what you can learn as a whole or within each session.
5. Training for large teams often comes with a large price tag.
Almost any type of purchasable training program - be it pre-recorded videos, live sessions, in-person classroom experiences, or otherwise - are priced on a “per seat” basis. If your team either needs access to multiple sessions, you have many team members who'll all need access to the same courses, or both, outsourced training can quickly get pricey.
6. Your access to training materials may be limited.
Some SEO training providers place legal restrictions on re-using the their training materials. This means you may not be able to record sessions, download slides, or distribute useful materials to your team. If sharing the educational love with your coworkers is a deal breaker for you, consider creating and running your SEO training in-house. If you're still leaning towards using an outside provider, be sure to read their FAQs or legal materials before pulling the trigger.
Key questions to ask
While there are many benefits of outsourcing your SEO training needs, depending on your specific needs there may be an equal number of drawbacks. When considering the right training route for your team it's worth taking the time to consider questions like:
- How many people need to take this training right now? And over the next one to two years?
- Do I have the internal expertise (or access to it) to create high quality training myself?
- Will it cost me more to build training than it's currently worth?
- Will it take me longer to build training than value it will provide?
- When do I need my employees trained by? Do I have time to wait, or is there an immediate need?
- Do I need a general SEO training program, one that focuses on specific topics, or one that details my unique process?
- Are the outsourced training options available to me worth the price? What do they include?
- Is it important to get some sort of certification, badge, or other certificate of proficiency upon completion of the training?
The answers to these questions may not give you a black-and-white answer as to whether building training in-house or finding an outside provider is the best choice for you, but they can help make the decision a bit less murky.
Thinking of going the outsourced route for some (or all) of your team's SEO training? Check out Moz Academy's online workshops.

Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read!
Tuesday, August 23, 2016
Google's Future is in the Cards
Posted by Dr-Pete
Google is constantly testing new design elements, but over the past few months they've been testing a change that, while it might seem small on the surface, represents a major philosophical shift. The screenshots in this post were all captured on live SERPs but appear to be tests and have not rolled out permanently. Here's an example of the basic change:
Notice how each result (ads and organic) is wrapped in a container and visually separated on a gray background. These containers are called "cards" in Google's vernacular, and they're important, but we'll get to that. Why should we care about a few borders and a background?
Shift #1: Mobile-first design
We've known for over two years that Google was shifting to a mobile-first design philosophy. Earlier this year, Google removed ads from the right-hand column. While this change was partially due to performance, I believe that a big part of it was standardizing the ad environment across platforms (mobile, tablet, desktop, etc.). What's not obvious from the test above is that this card-based design is more than just boxes and backgrounds. Google is testing a serious move toward single-column SERPs. The removal of ads from the right-hand column was only the beginning.
Here's a SERP screenshot for "polar bear" in Google's current desktop design:
Below is the test design, captured back in May. The Knowledge Panel has been moved to the top-left, and the right-hand column is gone. This is not a Knowledge Card of the sort we typically see on the top-left. It is the traditionally right-hand desktop entity, moved and collapsed (with a "More about Polar bear" arrow):
Here's the same search on an Android phone. Notice the card-based format and Knowledge Panel at the top. Obviously, nothing is in the right-hand column, because mobile only has one column:

There are still display differences between mobile and the desktop test, of course, but you can clearly start to see the convergence between the test and the current mobile design.
How will it all fit on the left?
Getting everything on current desktop SERPs into one column poses significant challenges, and Google is experimenting with a few variations. Here's a SERP that has both a Knowledge Panel and a Knowledge Card, for example:
In this case, the Knowledge Card showing the support phone number appears above the Knowledge Panel, and both are above the first organic result. You'll notice some design differences on this example, which was captured in July. Here's another example, with a different, more interesting layout:
This SERP has a local 3-pack, which is at the top (like on current designs), followed by an organic result, and then followed by the Knowledge Panel. This pushes the Knowledge Panel down the page quite a bit, and the #2 organic result down well below the fold. In another example, we saw a Knowledge Panel below four ads and four organic results. So, the traditional top placement may become more flexible.
Here's an example with a Featured Video, followed by a Knowledge Panel, and then the first organic:
The bottom of this same SERP has another interesting feature: a set of three different related searches, each with their own card. On the current design, these live at the bottom of the Knowledge Panel, but here they've been split off from the panel and expanded:

Keep in mind that these are only variations in testing, and that this testing has been ongoing over a period of months. We can piece together Google's intent from looking at multiple tests, but we can't pin down what the final design will look like or when (or even if) it will launch.
Shift #2: Google Now
There's another reason I think the card-based design is potentially interesting. Google Now, Google's predictive search product, was built on the "card" concept. Here's an Android screenshot:


Here, I've got another news carousel (note its similarity to mobile search news carousels), and then an individual news story with its own card. Google Now shows that you can create a result using virtually no traditional organic results and mix multiple Knowledge Graphs, news, and other entities in a single, fluid experience.
What does it all mean?
Cards are much more than just a design philosophy. We're used to seeing SERPs in clusters: a column of organic results, a Knowledge Panel, a box of news results, a box of local results, etc. Prior to individually-labelled ads, even AdWords ads came in visually-delineated chunks. With cards, we have to start thinking of each individual information unit as a stand-alone result, and every SERP is a mix of the most relevant results across a wide variety of sources and types.
Viewing SERPs as collection of search information units (SIUs?) also allows Google to easily adapt across a wide range of displays, from desktop all the way down to wearables, which might only have screen space for a single card. Even voice search can be adapted to cards. Currently, if you run a voice search on Android that returns a Featured Snippet, for example, your mobile device will read that snippet back to you. Voice search is returning one card, a single unit of search information.
Cards give Google a great deal of flexibility, and will begin to break traditional design barriers and result groupings. We may see ads leaving top and bottom blocks and being dispersed between other results. We may see a mix of shopping results, say a single product card and a multi-product carousel on the same page. Similarly, we may see multiple news results or carousels across a single page. We may see multiple Knowledge Cards or personalized results, if a search merits that kind of personalization.
The era of cards is the final nail in the coffin of ten blue links. Ultimately, our definition of search engine optimization is going to have to expand beyond traditional results and into any information unit that can drive traffic.
Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read!
Volunteer Park
Elliott Bay Trail
Alki Beach
Discovery Park
Green Lake
Ferry to Bainbridge Island
The Pinball Museum
Cyclops
Pie Bar





