Monday, February 29, 2016

Here Are The Top 7 Reasons You Should Attend MarTech

MarTech: The Marketing Tech Conference is right around the corner and we’re excited to share this incredible experience with you. If you haven’t registered yet, take a moment to review the top 7 reasons you should attend this year’s conference in San Francisco, March 21-22:

  1. Actionable content. MarTech sessions will help you:

    • Maximize the return on your marketing technology investments;
    • Implement a marketing culture that is responsive, agile and drives business success;
    • Manage people and processes to create brilliant online experiences for your customers.
  2. Accomplished presenters. Conference Chair Scott Brinker and the MarTech advisory board selected speakers based on their expertise and willingness to share. You get two days of presentations, case studies and expert panels – so many that Scott Brinker, our conference chair wrote an insider’s guide to this year’s conference.brinker keynote 1200x800
  3. Vendor agnostic. MarTech isn’t tied to any marketing platform or technology. MarTech will help you choose the technologies, and effectively implement the culture and processes that ensure results.
  4. Active community. MarTech will be the largest independent gathering of marketing technologists in North America. Connect with others who speak your language and are facing and overcoming your challenges.
  5. Meet more than 100 solution providers. The MarTech expo hall will be packed with companies providing comprehensive marketing clouds to task-specific point solutions. Need a solution? See who’s exhibiting.
  6. hacking_marketingScore a FREE copy of Scott’s book. Every paid full-access attendee will receive a complimentary copy of Scott Brinker’s new book, Hacking Marketing. Scott will be doing book signings at the opening reception on Sunday evening and during the networking reception on Monday evening.
  7. Save big as a team. Make this year’s conference a team affair! MarTech is an ideal experience for executive and marketing management, marketing operations and IT staff to share. Take advantage of our team rates and save 10%-20%.

Register for an All Access Pass and pay just $1695. You’ll get access to all of the sessions, networking events, expo hall, breakfasts, snacks and hot lunches at an exceptional value.

Register now and reserve your place at MarTech!

See you there!

-The MarTech Conference Team

The post Here Are The Top 7 Reasons You Should Attend MarTech appeared first on Search Engine Land.

SearchCap: Bing’s Search Wave, Mobile Page Speed Insights & Leap Day Google Doodle

searchcap-header-v2-scap

Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web.

From Search Engine Land:

Recent Headlines From Marketing Land, Our Sister Site Dedicated To Internet Marketing:

Search News From Around The Web:

Industry

Local & Maps

Search Marketing

Searching

SEM / Paid Search

SEO

The post SearchCap: Bing’s Search Wave, Mobile Page Speed Insights & Leap Day Google Doodle appeared first on Search Engine Land.

SEO & The Zero Moment of Truth

Bing’s “Search Wave” Showcases Search Volume For 2016 Presidential Candidates

bing-teal-logo-wordmark5-1920

Bing is gearing up for tomorrow’s Super Tuesday state primaries with the launch of its new “Search Wave” feature, a search tool that showcases search volume for each of this year’s presidential candidates.

Building on the Bing Elections that rolled out in December of last year, Bing says the new election feature provides a “window into public search interest for each candidate.”

The new feature offers at-a-glance candidate search numbers overall, as well as the ability to break down candidate search volume by state, age and gender.

Here’s a look at the “Search Wave” feature, filtered by state and party:

Bing Search Wave filter

Users can also drill down to see overall search volumes for individual candidates:

Bing Search Wave candidate

Powered by its Bing Predicts technology, the “Search Wave” feature is part of the site’s broader election experience which includes candidate pages, a political index and election timeline. Users can access the tool by searching on Bing for “candidate search volume.

The post Bing’s “Search Wave” Showcases Search Volume For 2016 Presidential Candidates appeared first on Search Engine Land.

The Need For Speed: 7 Observations On The Impact Of Page Speed To The Future Of Local Mobile Search

google-amp-speed-fast-ss-1920

Having a mobile website in and of itself sets an SMB apart from almost half of its competitors. The Local Search Association (LSA) issued a report commissioned by BuzzBoard titled “Mobile: Ready — or Not?” in January 2016.

BuzzBoard’s research found that 47.3 percent of SMBs do not have mobile-ready sites. The report also notes another 2015 study by RBC Capital Markets that reflects an even lower rate of adoption — it found 67 percent of SMBs’ sites are not mobile-ready.

Those with mobile websites arguably stand to double the audience of those without mobile sites. According to comScore’s “Global Mobile Report,” virtually half of all traffic to the top 100 digital media properties are mobile only.

The LSA and BuzzBoard report notes that in October 2015, Google stated that over 50 percent of search globally is on mobile. And surveys by LSA and Thrive Analytics reflect that mobile is even more important for local search — 60 percent said they usually use a mobile device (smartphone or tablet) when looking for local information online.

Mobile devices used to look up local information 60% of the time

The problem for those without a mobile site is twofold. First, consumers demand it. Google reports that 57 percent of users won’t recommend a business with a poorly designed mobile site, and 40 percent go to a competitor after a bad mobile experience.

Second, you’ll get fewer visits with a non-mobile site. Three months after Google launched its new algorithm last year that penalized the mobile search rank of web pages that were not optimized, almost half of non-mobile-friendly web pages experienced a loss in page rank.

Website page rank change post-mobilegeddon

Yet Google is constantly tweaking and updating its algorithm. So what’s next? How can savvy SMBs stay ahead and maintain their competitive advantage? One area to review is the speed of your mobile website. This is an area Google is taking an increasingly closer look at, especially with the launch of its new Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP), discussed in more detail below.

Below are seven observations and tips about the importance to a local business of its mobile website’s speed and how to outpace your competitors by maintaining a positive and responsive user experience.

1. Consumers Want Speed

Consumers don’t just want mobile websites, they want fast mobile websites. Consumer attention spans are growing shorter. Consumers abandon websites if they take too long to load, with 40 percent abandoning a site if it takes more than three seconds to load.

And their patience with mobile sites is even less than that for sites accessed via a desktop. Yet the median load time for the top 100 retail mobile sites was 4.33 seconds, as measured in 2013 by Radware, increasing to 4.8 seconds in 2014.

That 1+ second might not seem like much, but slow pages was the number one user complaint about mobile sites. According to Radware’s 2014 State of the Union for Mobile eCommerce Performance, every one-second delay impacts bounce rate, conversion rate, cart size and page views.

Impact of a 1 second delay in mobile load time

2. Speed Is A Google Ranking Factor For Mobile

Early reports stated that page load speed did not affect page rank on mobile websites as part of Google’s Mobilegeddon. Yet, anecdotally, observations about Mobilegeddon seem to contradict those reports.

Based on an analysis of client sites, Colin Guidi, director of SEO at 3Q Digital, said, “Visiting these sites via a mobile browser and slower processors shows that page speed and load time seems to be a heavier weighted ranking factor over this new mobile-friendly update.”

Studies also appear to support those observations. Searchmetrics released a report post-Mobilegeddon that demonstrated a strong correlation between page speed and page rank.

And now, Google itself has come out this year stating that Google favors faster sites. Further, David Besbris, AP Engineering of Google Search, asserted on the AMP Project page that “Speed has always been a cornerstone of Google Search.”

I think it’s safe to operate under the presumption that speed matters when it comes to local mobile search.

3. Google Has Set The Bar High

Google wants to maintain its market share in search by making sure that consumers like their user experience with sites pulled up in its search results.

Since consumers want a fast web experience, Google is pushing websites to make sure they meet those expectations, and it has set the bar high. Google’s standard is for mobile web pages to render in less than one second on a mobile network. One second is an extremely high standard when you consider, per above, most retail mobile websites mobile take more than four seconds to load.

It might also seem unfair given the number of factors that website operators do not have control over, such as the user’s network speed. Nevertheless, Google offers a PageSpeed Insight tool to measure a website’s performance and provide tips on improving poor scoring areas.

The illustration below is an analysis from that Google PageSpeed tool of a website that scored poorly. It provides both recommended and suggested fixes that would help speed up the site.

Google PageSpeed Insights example
Source: Google PageSpeed Insight Tool

4. New, Speedier Mobile Web Page Formats Are Being Introduced

Google is competing to keep users on the mobile web when they are increasingly spending time on apps. Platforms like Facebook and Snapchat are developing more ways to consume content within their apps and are providing a slick user experience to take user time away from the web, where Google dominates.

Facebook isn’t even trying to be discreet about its goal for Instant Articles, a format developed for publishers last year to speed up content delivery. It states, “We built Instant Articles to solve a specific problem — slow loading times on the mobile web created a problematic experience for people reading news on their phones.”

Google quickly fought back by announcing Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP), a new open-source framework that renders web pages to load almost instantly by making pages lighter-weight in data and by having Google cache the pages on their server.

Google also is beating Facebook to the punch by announcing the official launch date for AMP as February 24, 2016, ahead of Facebook’s April 12 release of Instant Articles to all publishers.

The videos below demonstrate the difference between AMP articles and regular mobile web articles. The demo was done on my daughter’s Motorola G (2nd Gen) smartphone using AT&T’s 3G mobile network.

The first video is of me using Google’s live demo at g.co/ampdemo with the search topic “Sports” on Chrome. In the second video, I click on links to web pages from the search topic “Sports” using regular Google mobile search on Chrome.

It is clear that the AMP articles loaded much more quickly and smoothly, usually in just a second or two, even with video. The regular mobile web pages took much longer, and I experienced quite a bit more jerkiness waiting for images or video to load. The user experience is night and day, as you can see for yourself.

5. Local Businesses Must Adapt, Too

Much of the initial push for almost instant page loads such as AMP are being tested by the large publishers. It’s easy to foresee, however, that the formats offered by Google and Facebook will quickly be adopted by national brands and become the consumer standard.

Unfortunately, once consumers experience the speed of these new formats, it will be tough for them to look back. Consumers will soon expect all their online mobile experiences to match that. Failing to keep up will result in losing customers who grow increasingly impatient.

According to a 2013 Harris Interactive survey, when faced with a negative mobile shopping experience, 33 percent of shoppers head to a competitor’s site, and 30 percent will never return to the offending website.

That negative shopping experience is a moving target, though, and consumer expectations change relative to what they become accustomed to. Soon, having a mobile website won’t be enough — local businesses will need to adapt their mobile websites to load as quickly as those of national brands.

6. Heavier Content Is Dragging Us Down

Contrary to public perception of the advances in technology, many online mobile experiences are actually getting slower.

According to Radware’s Mobile eCommerce annual reports, the median time to load increased from 4.33 seconds in 2013, to 4.8 seconds in 2014, to 5.5 seconds in 2015. The reason for that decline in speed is that today’s average web page contains much more data than before, as graphics, video and more complex functions crowd sites.

Radware found that the median page increased by almost 70 percent in both size and page complexity between 2014 and 2015. The extra data makes improving load speeds a technical challenge.

Even today’s recommended format, responsive design, can struggle with page load times. While the format does adjust for better viewability on mobile screens, behind-the-screen adjustments might slow down the user experience sufficient to affect bounce rate.

7. Some Basic Tips For Speeding Up Your Website

Nevertheless, with some sound website planning and savvy web tech expertise, there are many ways to ensure your mobile website is not cluttered with speed-killing weight and inefficient functions. Here are some tips to help you explore ways to speed up your mobile website.

  • The weight or size of your web page is a key factor in affecting load times. Minimize the number and size of files that must be downloaded when your page is loaded.
  • Images and video are heavy. Use compression tools and other size-reducing utilities to lighten the amount of data that must be loaded.
  • Avoid heavy formats for your page. Flash is already strongly discouraged for most mobile applications, but Google’s AMP also controls third-party Javascript so that it doesn’t interrupt page load.
  • Optimize your font for page load. Some fonts can be surprisingly large, and being smart about your selection and strategy for how they are used can improve speed.
  • Optimize the timing of when certain items on your page load. For example, content below the fold that isn’t viewable until the user scrolls down the screen can be delayed to load after content above the fold. Also, preloading can be timed so that content is loaded during inactive breaks before the user gets there.

Conclusion

These are just a few of the ways Google recommends to improve web page performance and that it utilizes in AMP to speed up the mobile web experience. Much of the “how” is rather technical, and you should consult with your web developer to execute your strategy to speed up your site. He or she will likely have additional solutions to suggest.

But understanding the issues is half the battle. Ideally, you can continue to make sure customers have a great user experience on your site that will reward you with more business. Outpacing your competitors is one sure way to stay ahead.

The post The Need For Speed: 7 Observations On The Impact Of Page Speed To The Future Of Local Mobile Search appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Why Is There A Leap Day? Today’s Google Doodle Sheds Light On Leap Year’s Extra Day

Google leap year feature image
Today is Leap Day, and Google is marking the special occasion – an extra day that comes around every four years – with an animated Leap Day Doodle featuring three bunnies in a row.

As explained on Google’s Doodle blog, Leap Day happens every four years (unless the year is divisible by 100) to keep our calendar in sync with the Earth’s rotation around the sun.

Without Leap Day, we’d be out of sync by about six hours per year.

Today’s Leap Day Google doodle is being displayed on Google’s homepages around the world and leads to a search for, “why is there a leap day?

Designed by doodler Olivia Hyuhn, Google shared some of Hyuhn’s early 2016 Leap Day Doodle sketches, like this one:
Google leap doodle sketch

Another draft was closer to the final Doodle, with a leaping frog jumping from one lily pad to the next.

google leap doodle sketch2

In the end, Hyuhn switched out the leaping frog with three bunnies, one marked with today’s date squeezing between the usual last day of February and first day of March.

Google doodle leap year 2016

In addition to being a leap year, Google notes 2016 is also special because it’s 11111100000 in binary.

The post Why Is There A Leap Day? Today’s Google Doodle Sheds Light On Leap Year’s Extra Day appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Friday, February 26, 2016

SearchCap: Google AdWords & Bing Ads Bugs, AMP Ranking Signal & Review Stars Bug

searchcap-header-v2-scap

Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web.

From Search Engine Land:

Recent Headlines From Marketing Land, Our Sister Site Dedicated To Internet Marketing:

Search News From Around The Web:

Industry

Local & Maps

Link Building

SEO

SEM / Paid Search

Search Marketing

The post SearchCap: Google AdWords & Bing Ads Bugs, AMP Ranking Signal & Review Stars Bug appeared first on Search Engine Land.

The Content Strategist Playbook: Evangelizing Content And Setting Yourself Up For Success

Content marketing is a popular practice right now, and it’s easy to see why. Interruptive advertising simply isn’t working, and as a result, creating content people actually choose to read, watch, and interact with is becoming an increasingly attractive alternative for brands.

This guide from Contently outlines the Why, When, and How of content marketing and shows:

  • Why content marketing can lead to success
  • How to define business goals
  • Good content’s impact on SEO

Visit Digital Marketing Depot to get your copy.

The post The Content Strategist Playbook: Evangelizing Content And Setting Yourself Up For Success appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Prioritizing Local Search Profile Listings: 2 Methods

yellow-pages-directory-local-ss-1920

Undertaking local listing management can be a daunting task. We all understand the importance of standard local listing management: update your local listing profile on a variety of websites to ensure visibility in the world of local search. Simple enough.

The challenge arises when determining where to focus your local listing management efforts. Claiming profiles and taking ownership over ones that were previously managed by someone else can be a lengthy process (sometimes taking months), and it is important to understand which local business listing sites to focus on when initiating a local listing management strategy.

I determine which local search websites are worth pursuing profiles on through two specific means:

First, I consolidate top local business listing sites (for my specific industry) by Domain Authority. Those sites that have a high Domain Authority take precedent when claiming and creating profiles because, in conjunction with my local listing optimization strategy, I can also strengthen my inbound link profile.

The second method involves exploring searcher behavior in Google Analytics, then utilizing this data to seek out opportunities to increase local online presence based on referral traffic sources.

Method 1: Local Business Listing Site Domain Authority

Moz defines Domain Authority as a metric “that predicts how well a website will rank on search engines.” It is measured on a 100-point scale.

We can use the Domain Authority of specific local business listing sites to determine which of these sites should capture user attention — or, put another way, which sites are more likely to rank higher in search results, allowing a searcher to click through and find Business XYZ through barnacle SEO methods.

The chart below shows the Domain Authority associated with popular local business listing sites, as measured by Moz’s free Open Site Explorer tool, which helps marketers research “behind the scenes” of a link. I use this tool to determine if garnering a local profile on the site is worth exploring.

Local Search Site Domain Authority

Local Business Listing Site Domain Authority

Based on this information, I would prioritize building my local listing in Google My Business and Yelp before I would explore opportunities with Superpages and Best Of The Web.

Of course, the above is a high-level overview of sites that all have relatively high Domain Authority, and honestly, I would likely prioritize all or most of these sites.

However, if you are working within a specific niche (e.g., healthcare) that has a variety of industry-specific local business listing sites that your customers use to find you (e.g., ZocDoc, Healthgrades), the Domain Authority method can help you determine which sites are worth investing your time in to build a local profile.

Method 2: Local Search Behavior In Google Analytics

Data pulled from Google Analytics can provide deep insights into determining where to focus local listing management efforts, as well as if there is potential to further meet your business goals through advertising on local business listing sites.

In conjunction with the Domain Authority method, I’ve always used Google Analytics to help me determine where to begin my local listing management implementation, and it’s important to keep in mind that priorities will be different depending on your business’s target market and the websites your customer base utilizes for local search.

Navigate in Google Analytics to Acquisition, then All Traffic, then Referrals.

Finding referrals in Google Analytics

Referral Path

In this display, you can see where the majority of your traffic is finding you. This can show if there are any local opportunities you can capitalize on to achieve your business’s goals — whether it be brand awareness, conversion optimization or streamlining local search for a better user experience.

For example, I can deduce that the business is “review-driven” if I find that the majority of referrals are coming from Yelp and Angie’s List. In this case, the next move would likely be advertising on Yelp, or perhaps launching a review-generating campaign in an effort to boost the business’s organic listing on local review sites.

Conversely, if you find that most of your referral traffic is coming from sites like BBB.org, you may want to pursue local business listing sites that have strong credibility for your specific industry. Once you’ve compiled a list of sites that fit this description, cross-check them through the Open Site Explorer to further determine if advertising there is worth your time and money.

Track Your Efforts

Monitoring the local profiles you’ve created is a critical aspect of understanding their value and determining where to hone your efforts.

Many local sites, such as Google My Business, provide deep insights to allow you to determine your local listing’s performance. Yelp provides a dashboard telling you about searcher behavior on your page. Local, industry-specific business sites will often offer similar data (sometimes even free of charge) to those who build an online local profile.

You can then use this information, gathered over time, to seek out additional opportunities. These opportunities could range from advertising on specific local business listing sites, if those sites garner strong referral traffic, to creating a retargeting campaign for those who clicked from specific local sites and then bounced from your site.

We can all agree that the importance of local search should not be understated, regardless of the options that you choose to explore when executing a local listing optimization strategy. Still, these two techniques are sure to jump-start your strategy or give you some ideas as to where to begin.

The post Prioritizing Local Search Profile Listings: 2 Methods appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Search In Pics: Coca Cola Google Cardboard, Googley Volvo & Animated Google Sign

In this week’s Search In Pictures, here are the latest images culled from the web, showing what people eat at the search engine companies, how they play, who they meet, where they speak, what toys they have and more.

View From Google’s San Francisco Office:

google San Francisco Office
Source: Google+

GIF: Google Cardboard From Coca Cola Box:

google-cardboard-cocacola-1456260209
Source: Google+

Google Light Up Sign:

google-animated-sign-1456230709
Source: Google+

Google AMP Error Man:

google-amp-error-man-1456403844
Source: Twitter

Googley Volvo License Plate:

Googley Volvo License Plate
Source: Google+

The post Search In Pics: Coca Cola Google Cardboard, Googley Volvo & Animated Google Sign appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Google Confirms Review Stars Mysterious Disappearance In Search Results Was A Bug

google-stars-reviews-rankings7-ss-1920

Earlier this week we reported that the review stars began dropping out of the Google search results. Within 24-hours of reporting it, the review stars started showing up again in the Google search results.

This morning in a hangout at the 56 minute mark, Google’s John Mueller confirmed they are coming back and the reason they dropped out was due to a bug. Google said they fixed the bug and the reviews should all come back soon.

Here is the Mozcast feature report tool showing us they are now back to normal in the search results:

mozcast-reviews-update

The reviews initially dropped out on the 16th of February and then starting coming back a few days ago after we reported the issue to Google.

The post Google Confirms Review Stars Mysterious Disappearance In Search Results Was A Bug appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Connecting Demographics To Search Queries

demographic-segmentation-ss-1920

Advertising in search is often difficult to conceptualize for many brands because of how different the live auction and targeting methodology is compared with traditional media planning and buying. Media strategies are built on market research, which always includes target demographics or personas.

Specialty channels like search — where the targeting strategy is based on keywords and not necessarily on demographics or personas — cause a methodological disconnect for some brands and traditional planners and buyers. The result is that search often becomes just another impression/cost buy, which is not how it should be used.

Google has made strides in providing additional information on demographics and the ability to target personas, specifically through the Google Display Network, but when buying on the search engines themselves, most demographic information is not great. However, here is a potential way to help you bridge that gap between demographics and search keyword strategies.

Using The Google Display Planner To Glean Demographic Info

Although this tool is supposed to be more for display, you can still get demographic information based on keywords. The data comes from Google DoubleClick network, but it still represents user cookies that are looking for and engaging in content related to the keywords you enter.

It can be found here: http://ift.tt/KyEU91

Once you go to the Display Planner, click the drop-down arrow that says “Search for new targeting ideas using a phrase, website, or category.” Enter the keyword for which you want demographic info, then click the button that says “Get ad group ideas.”

google-display-planner-enter-keyword

This will bring up a screen with gender, device and age bucket information — similar to the information that Google Universal Analytics provides. The benefit is that you can use this to be proactive instead of reactive.

google-display-planner-demo-data

Now, there isn’t a way to get a meaningful download with the demo data, even though it appears on the screen in these charts. The reason for this is that the purpose of this tool is to convince you to buy more by giving you additional display suggestions.

However, if there is a chart appearing, that means those numbers have got to be in the source code:

google-display-planner-page-source-code

This means you can capture that information by extracting it from the source, which will provide you with nice, clean datasets of demographic information on your keyword.

extracted demographic data

[Click to enlarge]

Now, if you are like me, one keyword really is just not enough. I want the information on all of my keywords… and I tend to have a lot of them.

To get the information for ~700 keywords, it would probably take someone manually collecting it for four or five hours — which is what I had one of my tremendous associates do for me to see if there were any real insights, and there were! I’m in the market for a new smartphone, so that’s what we looked at: smartphones and providers.

To make the data easier to understand, I put it into TIBCO Spotfire (Tableau also is a good choice) and made this dashboard to see what we got:

TIBCO-spotfire-demographic-charts

[Click to enlarge]

We also created some filters by word type, brand, stage in the funnel, product type and so on.

demographic-segmentation

Demographic data filtered by funnel stage [Click to enlarge]

keyword-demographics

Demographic data filtered by keyword [Click to enlarge]

It was interesting to note that people were more likely to search for purchase-based words on their desktops and that some brands had 10- to 15-percent difference in gender and age searches.

Additionally, MetroPCS and Google phones had the largest group of older searchers, while Samsung and Apple had the youngest and were also searched for 10 percent more on mobile.

Regardless, when keywords have the added benefit of some representation of demographic information, it creates a bridge of communication to traditional channels that buy based on cost, impressions and demographics.

Additional Options

If you want to collect this data in a more efficient way, there are several choices, but there are risks. We don’t allow any automated collection/scraping of Google for many reasons, including its terms and conditions, which you would be violating.

And Google is very likely to catch you if you don’t understand its systems, resulting in an hour ban of your IP address. This can be very bad, especially if you are buying advertisements in Google, as it disables your ability to do that.

With all that said, since Google collects everyone’s website content (unless not allowed in robots.txt), this is how you would be able to accomplish collecting their information. I would probably use something like Selenium (a browser-simulating add-on), unless you’re a senior Java developer, as the time control rates are easier to control and understand.

I would use the Selenium nodes in KNIME, as it allows you to import variables and manipulate and store data more easily than the web browser application. And that flow would look something like this:

workflow

Services such as Experian Audience View also offer panel-based demographic search query information. However, you’ll need to pay for such services, while the Display Planner tool is free.

The post Connecting Demographics To Search Queries appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Google: AMP Not Yet A Search Ranking Signal

google-amp-speed-race-fast-ss-1920

John Mueller, a Google Webmaster Trends Analysts, said this morning in a Google Hangout at the 15:50 mark into the video that AMP is not yet a ranking signal in the Google search ranking algorithm.

We reported in December that AMP might become a ranking signal but clearly, that has not happened yet.

John Muller said, “Is AMP a ranking signal? At the moment, it is not a ranking signal.”

He went on to explain that you can use AMP to become mobile friendly but AMP itself is not a ranking signal.

AMP launched early on Tuesday and only shows in the mobile search top news box. Google likely plans to expand AMP beyond the news box and when it does, I can see it becoming a ranking signal then. But until then, I doubt it makes sense to make it a ranking signal, that is – until it is used in the core mobile web search results.

The post Google: AMP Not Yet A Search Ranking Signal appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Google App Updates Will Include New Animations & Ability To Change Google Logo Colors

AdWords And Bing Ads Both Having Late-Week Reporting Troubles

google-adwords-bing-ads-1920

For paid search managers, Friday could be a bit of a frustrating end to the week.

Google AdWords reports aren’t downloading or printing. The issue started Thursday and continues into Friday. Users instead get the “red bar of death” informing them that “there was an error with your operation”.

adwords-red-bar-of-death

Google has acknowledged the issue on Twitter and in the advertiser community form and says its engineers are working on it.

Yesterday, Bing Ads had reporting delays that affected the Web UI, mobile and API. Later in the day, most the metrics were up to date, except conversions and Bing Shopping Campaign (BSC) data.

As of 3:00 PM PST on 02/25/2016, Ad Campaign performance reporting (Impression, Clicks, Spend) is up to date and processing normally, whereas conversion and BSC data is still catching up and running 6 hours behind.

In the night, some Bing Ads advertisers also had their accounts paused for some period of time under an hour. Those affected will have received email notifications. Just a week ago, Bing Ads had a much more prolonged reporting snag, with historical data not being fully available for more than a week.

To monitor progress on these issues, visit the threads on the AdWords Community Forum and the Bing Ads Platform Health Blog.

Hey, at least it’s not the end of the month reporting time … yet.

The post AdWords And Bing Ads Both Having Late-Week Reporting Troubles appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Thursday, February 25, 2016

SearchCap: Google Search Console Delays, Google Maps Closed & SEO Expectations

searchcap-header-v2-scap

Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web.

From Search Engine Land:

Recent Headlines From Marketing Land, Our Sister Site Dedicated To Internet Marketing:

Search News From Around The Web:

Industry

Local & Maps

Link Building

Searching

SEO

SEM / Paid Search

Search Marketing

The post SearchCap: Google Search Console Delays, Google Maps Closed & SEO Expectations appeared first on Search Engine Land.

The Death Of Search Marketing Expertise

graveyard-dead-ss-1920

Recently, I had dinner in Orlando with Bill and Ted (not their real names), some pretty successful digital agency owners. (By successful, I mean more than 50 employees and strong annual revenues.)

They’ve been friends of mine for a long time, so I assumed they’d be up for a little of the usual expert banter.

The first punch in the gut came when I casually explained about some PPC bidding methods we routinely use. My friends had no idea what I was talking about. Hyperventilating, I reminded myself they deliver SEO services, primarily.

So I told a story from the SEO world. As usual, it involved a chartered jet, a bottle of Scandinavian spirits, a spammer with a weird nickname and a senior Google evangelist who shall remain nameless. I was interrupted as I was just getting warmed up. The guys who run this SEO-first agency simply had not heard of the senior Googler — one of a handful of SEO evangelists Google has ever had in its history.

Talk turned to sports. The longevity of Jaromir Jagr’s mullet was debated.

Pardon the assumption, but I always thought the owners of professional services firms were more respected when they had “chops.” Granted, the owners or top execs of an agency may not need to get down in the weeds for their team to be successful. But you’d think we’d at least need to maintain a culture of expertise in agencies.

Less obvious — but no less important, if you ask me — is the need to keep up with an industry’s people, personalities and events. At some level, networks and connections matter. It’s hard to divorce the concept of maintaining relationships with key people (key experts) in a fast-moving industry from the very kernel of expertise itself. There are the “on paper” answers to tough problems, and there are the “real answers.” A great network provides shortcuts to the truth.

Many imperfections in agencies, of course, stem from low profit margins that stand in the way of learning opportunities, “20 percent time” and R&D.

Regardless, I’d like to challenge the related fiction that the only chances for agencies to climb out of the low-margin trap are those that “figure out scale” and deliver cookie-cutter services. The claim is demonstrably false. Take ReachLocal ($RLOC): have a good look at their financials and decide for yourself whether they’ve done well, even after raising all that money in an IPO.

Of note: ReachLocal’s once high-flying stock currently trades below book value. Flat to declining revenues may indicate that the cookie-cutter model, when applied outside of realms like sandwiches and oil changes, breeds client dissatisfaction.

An Aside About Awesomeness

David Ogilvy was brilliant. He also had good enough timing to be a co-founder, in 1948, of an ad agency that would soon win gargantuan accounts in an era when big brand ad spending was in its ascendancy.

Arguably, Ogilvy’s inspirational power at his own company was heightened by the fact that Ogilvy possessed what Seth Godin calls a “superpower” — no mere manager, bean-counter or big idea man, Ogilvy consistently wrote powerful advertising copy that made clients wealthy. Like several other early pioneers, he was also a champion of using data and research to improve targeting.

Ogilvy found his way to the top by rolling up his sleeves and doing a job he loved, not by planning a business model, raising “VC” or learning how to manage “key functions in a company of this type.”

Given his financial success, Ogilvy could be forgiven for enjoying the fruits of his labor in his later years, relaxing in his massive French chateau, Touffou.

It may simply be because the agency business is too competitive now, and upstarts face behemoths backed by decades of tradition and billions in revenue. Or maybe it’s because we’re facing a massive shift towards martech in the wake of the steady unraveling of the TV-industrial complex. But our world today doesn’t look much like Ogilvy’s.

It’s far tougher for agency owners and executives to get credit for maintaining “chops” nowadays, especially with the proliferation of media, technology, events and fields of expertise requiring attention. The pace of change is faster than it was in Ogilvy’s heyday; optimization is an hourly or daily activity. I get it. No one person, short of Mark Zuckerberg, is getting much mileage out of “keeping up.”

To paraphrase Bart Simpson: Gotcha. Can’t win, don’t try. Right?

Working “In The Business” — A Bad Thing?

Like most small business founders, agency founders have been led to believe that they should stop poking their noses into accounts, stop trying to achieve results directly for clients, stop holding technical conversations with clients and employees. That’s how you “stay small.” Don’t you want to get big?

According to business orthodoxy, the real problem would be if agency founders remained technicians. In The E-Myth Revisited: Why Most Small Businesses Don’t Work, and What to Do About It, Michael Gerber asserts that there are really three competing people fighting inside the body of a small business founder: the Technician, the Manager and the Entrepreneur. The Technician is greedy for the attention of the business, because the Technician just wants to work on stuff. If left to his own devices, the Technician will destroy the business. Balance is a must.

Fair enough. But as any critical reader might conclude, Gerber doesn’t just instill balance in the technician, he shoots the technician.

It’s important to remember that his entire book is constructed as a dialogue with the owner of a pie shop (not even a variety of baked goods!), and that saving this pie baker from the slow-growth future of always being in the shop baking pies comes across as cutting-edge business advice that should be widely applied.

The franchise model (and business process thinking) of companies like McDonald’s and Mrs. Fields’ Cookies are held up as models for how to save the business founder from having to work “in the business” instead of “on the business.”

For a professional services agency, that’s extreme advice. It explains why many clients of marketing agencies today feel like they’re being served up a plate of Mrs. Fields’ Cookies (literally: cookie-cutter services) instead of developing a relationship with an educated, connected, senior-level marketing professional and the team around them.

Beyond that, Gerber’s ideas predate the complex challenges and opportunities related to scaling businesses in a digital and interconnected world. The trends of the past 20 years have radically altered business culture, supply chain management and much else. Certain business functions (under the aegis of the all-important Manager lionized in Gerber’s book) are more accessible to small companies today with software and outsourcing. Communicating with third-party vendors of logistical and managerial functions is also easier, thanks to tools.

Like many founders, I’ve often longed to follow Gerber’s advice to log out for the last time and work full-time “on the business.” As an already-proven expert, I’d also love to skip out on the Google Partners exams they continually require experts to re-take.

But I sense it doesn’t work that way. Our field is a little like pro golf. Your PGA Tour exemption – unless you’re the proud winner of a major or two – lasts but a couple of years. Fall out of touch with the fundamentals because you’re too busy hobnobbing with sponsors and celebrities and meeting with your agent, lawyer and accountant, and you’ll find yourself literally “back in school” — the professional golf “qualifying school” events – if you want to rejoin the pro ranks.

Expertise Matters

Somehow, expertise is going to have to rub off on employees who work on complex digital marketing assignments. Once liftoff is achieved, it would help if some employees developed actual careers with a sense of professional direction, as opposed to being semi-competent in addressing a few odd tasks.

There are only so many ways for this to happen, and in many agency cultures, ownership has no game plan to allow this to happen.

First off, it may be time to drop the act. You know the one. “The company is so big now, I’ve grown distant from day-to-day operations.” “I’m a philanthropist/show horse breeder/angel investor/triathlete.” Nothing against charity, the equine arts, angels or exercise, but unless you’re the departing chairperson of a mysterious, privately held $50 billion insurance company, isn’t all that extracurricular activity just a shade pretentious?

Mentoring (in some form or fashion) is essential. Many agencies do more monitoring than mentoring, trying to squeeze every ounce of “work” out of new people.

Conferences and meetups are also invaluable sources of insight and learning. To be sure, with tight agency budgets, not everyone can go; hardly anyone can get out frequently or routinely. But agencies that shut themselves out from industry events entirely are relegating themselves to a kind of dogged toil increasingly devoid of insight.

“Agency Culture” Beyond Paintball And Snacks

Let’s be clear: this isn’t about paintball, or what kind of food is available at the office. It’s about a culture of expertise and a shared professional mission, as opposed to a culture of pure financial performance.

Some of the largest agencies in the world — ironically, those who can most afford to educate and inspire their people — are the ones skimping the most. The bean-counters have taken hold.

According to Michael Gerber, the genius of the “Turn-Key Revolution” is that a business can operate using “people with the lowest possible level of skill.” That’s fine for Mrs. Fields’ Cookies. Personally, I’ll take Gerber’s recipe with a grain of salt.

The post The Death Of Search Marketing Expertise appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Google Is Fixing The “Permanently Closed” Problem

business-closed-ss-1920

I’ve heard many complaints in the last couple years from business owners who have issues with their listings showing up as “Permanently Closed” in the search results on Google.

Usually, it happens to businesses who have relocated, and their customers are seeing their old location with a big, ugly, red “Permanently closed” label instead of seeing the new location’s address.

In the last couple of months, I’ve noticed that Google My Business support is doing something different to solve these issues. Unknown to many, there is actually a “Moved” feature on Google Maps that solves this issue.

Why Is This A Problem?

When a business moves, Google instructs them to just update the address in their Google My Business dashboard. This is always the best option for a business when they move because it will keep all their followers, reviews and photos intact.

However, businesses often have duplicate listings and don’t realize it — and those listings don’t get updated. Also, businesses who don’t claim their listings via Google My Business would end up with a listing marked closed, since the Map Maker rules say to close a listing when a business moves.

How To Fix It

I needed to find an example for this article, and it took me less than two minutes to find one, since this is a pretty widespread issue. I searched for “State Farm Dallas TX,” and one of the first ones marked “permanently closed” was an insurance agent who had relocated his office.

state farm dallas tx Google Search

This insurance agent had two listings — one at his new office, which was claimed/verified via Google My Business, and a second that was unclaimed and marked “Permanently closed.”

To fix it, I contacted Google My Business via Twitter Support (WAY better than phone support) and asked them to mark the old location as moved. There is actually a status called “Moved,” and it is very different from “Permanently closed.”

If you’re like me, you probably had no clue this status existed, since it only exists on Google Maps, not Google Map Maker, and it is referenced nowhere in the Google My Business help center.

What Happens When A Listing Is Marked Moved

About 24 to 72 hours after Google marks a listing “Moved,” you’ll see a few things happen:

  1. The listing will completely vanish from Google Search and Google Maps, making it impossible for customers to accidentally see.
  2. Since the listing doesn’t show up anywhere, the “Permanently closed” message won’t show up anywhere, either.
  3. Google actually sets the Google Maps URL for the old location with a 302 HTTP status code, and when you load the Maps URL for the old location, it will forward to the new location.
  4. Reviews from the closed listing will transfer to the new listing (double-check to make sure that happens).
  5. The Map Maker listing for the old location doesn’t disappear but will be impossible to find without the direct URL that uses the CID number. It will remain with the “Permanently closed” status, since there is no such thing as a “Moved” status on Map Maker.

I believe Google is working on a solution to allow users to submit this edit via Google Maps so that you don’t have to contact Google My Business support every time you want it done.

Currently, there is a “Moved” button on Google Maps under “Suggest an Edit,” and there is supposed to be a box below it that allows you to insert the information for the new location. I asked dozens of people, and the only person who was able to see this was Mike Blumenthal, who was kind enough to send me a screenshot.

Moved Elsewhere Google Maps

Simply pressing the “Moved elsewhere” button will not accomplish what I described above and won’t help the “Permanently closed” listing disappear. I believe pressing the button results in the little red “Relocated” message that you see in this picture in the Local Finder.

However, the listing itself on Google Maps and the search results still has that huge red closed label.

Relocated Message

This is great news for those of you who have been struggling to get rid of these listings. Please reach out to me on Twitter or Google Plus if you have any questions.

The post Google Is Fixing The “Permanently Closed” Problem appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Setting Local SEO Expectations: 3 Points To Hit Early And Often

multi-location-business-miller-1200

A driving force behind my marketing career over the past few years has been “Help the world, one business owner at a time.”

So I’ve made it my mission to not only help businesses better their SEO practices, but also help the owners understand what SEO truly is.

Sadly, misinformation about the field of SEO is still being circulated. One way I’ve been able to effectively overcome some of the outdated or incorrect information still floating around out there is by talking about the “hard truths” or lesser known mechanics behind local SEO.

I try to do this as early into the campaign as I can and repeat myself many times over the course of it. I always like to tell clients what to truly expect when trying this type of a campaign; a lot of times, no other SEO company has offered up info like this.

There are three things in particular that I really try to drive home when it comes to local SEO. This sets a better expectation for clients moving forward and establishes an honest/transparent relationship from the get-go.

1. Google Giveth, And Google Taketh Away

SEO is always changing, and it always will be. What works this year may not work next year. The only constant is change, so it’s imperative to arm yourself with knowledge.

Knowing this helps me create a proactive approach to a client’s marketing campaign. A metaphor I like to use with clients is that SEO is a lot like the game of chess: You have to see three moves ahead while still actively moving one step forward. Your initial moves will affect your later moves, and sometimes you can get hurt through no fault of your own (For example, Google will roll out an update).

I tell small business owners to make sure their game plan is flexible, as they need to account for those constant changes that SEO is known to bear. 

A great example would be the recent changes to the Google local system — not only did they reduce the local results from seven businesses to three, but they also stripped away all of the social components tied to Google+ and streamlined the Google My Business dashboard. All this occurred just in the past year!

2. Long-Tail Searches Can Be More Valuable Than Generic Phrases

Because local SEO largely revolves around local map packs, long-tail searches are often overlooked. Long-tail searching is a better indicator of user intent, which is an increasingly important factor in local SEO and leads to more engagement and higher rankings over time.

After a client understands more about user intent, I tell them that a good way to plan for these long-tail searches is by asking yourself questions. I try to have them put themselves in a customer’s shoes. From there, I can set a realistic expectation of how the online strategy will work and who/what keywords to target based on that intent.

Another fun exercise to do with clients is to have them create a “Jeopardy” game board. When it comes to long-tail searches, have them think like the popular game show — answer in the form of a question not only to gain keywords, but also to gauge user intent and discover blog topics for their website.

For example, when I started working with a local plumber, we began with the most basic questions — you know, the $200 ones — like, “What is a plumber?,”  “What is a drain?,” “What is a water heater?” and so on. Then we sprinkled in some of the more complex questions (the $1,000–$2,000 ones).

A hearty list of long-tail searches comes out of this practice, and your client has a better understanding of SEO, including what to expect from keyword reports and rankings.

3. SEO Is An Ongoing Investment — There Is No “Set It And Forget It”

Every website can benefit from SEO and needs continued optimization to obtain and maintain rankings for target key phrases. Just as any industry or marketplace evolves, so does search engine optimization. 

Consequently, SEO is not a one-time investment; constant cultivation is necessary to ensure that SEO becomes (and remains) an integrated part of a small business’s marketing plan.  

I like to tell clients this so they can begin thinking long-term and realize how many options SEO can provide them. Every time I reach out to a client for a report, I include a “what’s next” section. 

This helps me set campaign expectations month to month, and it seems to keep the client relationships going longer. Painting value early and often has been a helpful tactic in increasing our client retention.

SEO is more important (and more reputable) than ever before, especially for local small business owners. Driving home these three expectations through my client communications has helped me build better campaigns and better relationships — and help one small business owner at a time.

The post Setting Local SEO Expectations: 3 Points To Hit Early And Often appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Google Explains How Search Console Reports Work

google-tools1-ss-1920

Google Webmaster Trends Analysts, John Mueller, wrote a detailed post on Google+ explaining how the Search Console reporting works and why it may seem delayed for some of the reports.

The short answer is that it takes time for the data to get to the Search Console because of (a) the time it takes Google to send the data from the crawling department to the search console department and (b) different URLs on a site can be crawled less or more frequently.

Here is how John Mueller put it, so it is crystal clear:

When it comes to the aggregated reports in Search Console, there are two time-elements involved that are good to be aware of:

  • Latency from crawling to reporting. It takes a few days (to about a week) for Search Console to display data after it’s been crawled. There are various processes that run over the data, and Search Console tries to reflect the final state — which can take a bit of time to get. This is particularly visible with an abrupt change, such as going from “no AMP pages” to “lots of AMP pages”.
  • Per-URL crawl rates differ. Some URLs are crawled every few minutes, others just every couple months, and many somewhere in between. If you go from “all URLs are broken” to “all URLs are fixed” (which is awesome if you have a way to do that!), it will take some time to drop to “zero errors” in the aggregated reports. This is probably too much, but I created a simple spreadsheet to show that, feel free to make a copy & play with it: https://goo.gl/1pToL8

Questions around why Google doesn’t show my site’s AMP errors or why hasn’t Google picked up that we fixed some of our crawl errors yesterday is simply because of time delays in crawl and report delivery.

Many webmasters already know that the Google Search Console data is delayed by at least two-days or more, this explains why that is the case.

The post Google Explains How Search Console Reports Work appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Wednesday, February 24, 2016

SearchCap: Google AMP, Send Map To Phone & Ad Layout

searchcap-header-v2-scap

Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web.

From Search Engine Land:

  • Google’s New SERP Layout: The Biggest Winners & Losers
    Feb 24, 2016 by Larry Kim

    What has been the impact of Google’s new desktop ad layout thus far? Columnist Larry Kim uses data to show who has benefited and who has suffered from the change.

  • How To Get Started With Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP)
    Feb 24, 2016 by Paul Shapiro

    Google is currently rolling out accelerated mobile pages in its mobile search results, but how can you get in on the action? Columnist Paul Shapiro explains how you can mark up your mobile pages for a better mobile user experience.

  • Google’s AMP Top Stories Now Live In Mobile Search Results
    Feb 24, 2016 by Greg Sterling

    AMP’s objective is a faster, more engaging mobile web experience in an open ecosystem.

  • Google “Send To Your Phone” Comes To Local Knowledge Graph Search Box
    Feb 24, 2016 by Barry Schwartz

    Now, you can use the “Send to your phone” feature directly in the Google web search results, not just in the Google map search results.

  • An Inside Look At The Upcoming MarTech Conference
    Feb 23, 2016 by Search Engine Land

    We’re four weeks away from the next MarTech conference in San Francisco. This will be the biggest and best one yet, and I wanted to give you a deeper preview of what to expect. If you haven’t registered yet, we are offering our low pre-conference rate discount, which is $200 off the on-site ticket price. […]

  • Brand Bidding & PPC Optimization: Best Practices For Brand Bidding (Part 3 of 8)
    Feb 23, 2016 by Lori Weiman

    Columnist Lori Weiman continues her series on brand bidding by discussing best practices for creating and optimizing successful branded PPC campaigns.

  • How Are You Managing Social Media Risk?
    Feb 24, 2016 by Digital Marketing Depot

    Today, the average enterprise manages more than 300 social media accounts and more than a half-million social media posts by users on branded pages — but not all of this activity is positive. There has been a sevenfold increase in spam messages. The number of unauthorized social media accounts has skyrocketed. Social media management costs […]

Recent Headlines From Marketing Land, Our Sister Site Dedicated To Internet Marketing:

Search News From Around The Web:

Industry

Local & Maps

Link Building

Searching

SEO

SEM / Paid Search

The post SearchCap: Google AMP, Send Map To Phone & Ad Layout appeared first on Search Engine Land.