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Archive for April, 2008

The dilemma of Page Rank Sculpting, follow or nofollow

Saturday, April 19th, 2008

While every one around the SEO corner is busy hoarding the page rank of their site using nofollow attribute in quest to rank the important pages of a website, I am quite sure this practice (page rank sculpting) is just an accident waiting to happen as webmasters will abuse it up to an extent that Google will do what they have done to ‘keyword meta tag’ – start ignoring it. After the public announcements and claims done by Rand Fishkin, Stephen Spencer, Danny Sullivan and even Matt Cutts, that directing the link juice to the important pages of a website improves the Search Engine Ranking of a website, the SEO community is using nofollow on anything they don’t want to rank for, claiming it a ‘wastage of link juice’ otherwise. But I personally believe that this nofollow practice is taking the SEO community no where, as webmasters have a license to get away to rank their websites even with a poor internal navigation and hence poor user experience. So obviously the nofollow era is facilitating more spammy websites making it to the top of the Search Engine lists. It’s just matter of time, when Google will take an evasive action.

SMX RedAlkemi page rank sculpting

If we have a look at the origin of a nofollow attribute, we find that nofollow attribute was made with the primary motto to combat comment spam (which it has failed miserably as comment spammers are still employed). Further Google found that nofollow can also help Google bots to firstly determine the most important pages out of huge websites with complex blog categories in little time and secondly the webmasters could use nofollow while linking to some website content which they don’t want to get associated with and vote to. Here is a recent precise statement made by Matt Cutts on use of nofollow attribute:

“The nofollow attribute is just a mechanism that gives webmasters the ability to modify PageRank flow at link-level granularity. Plenty of other mechanisms would also work (e.g. a link through a page that is robot.txt’ed out), but nofollow on individual links is simpler for some folks to use. There’s no stigma to using nofollow, even on your own internal links; for Google, nofollow’ed links are dropped out of our link graph; we don’t even use such links for discovery. By the way, the nofollow meta tag does that same thing, but at a page level.”

Now getting back to my anti-nofollow visionary, the nofollow tags also facilitate a fake information architecture. As we know Google ranks the sites with solid internal navigational architecture higher on SERP as these are the sites which provide rich user experience to the Google users as the important content is just 3 clicks away, nofollow isn’t helping to their cause. Coz what most webmasters are doing at the moment is hoarding the page rank and shooting it on the targeted pages even when the target page is nothing but pure crap and weakly linked from other pages of the site.

Having said that, please don’t take me wrong, as I am not questioning the effectiveness of page rank sculpting, because it’s working great at the moment, but I am not too sure how long will this nofollow rampage last: I am afraid not too long. So I have a simple advise to give – use nofollow but only after you have crystallized your internal navigation and don’t rely 100% on this nofollow ploy as you might soon see Google derank the websites with weak internal structure indulging in page rank sculpting. I am looking forward to SMX Advanced and hopeful that it might clear up the mounted clouds over rank sculpting dilemma.



We are now offering ‘Deep Indexing Service’

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

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Are you still wondering if all the pages of your website, indexed in Search Engines or not? Leave your worries to us as now we are offering a unique SEO service - Deep Indexing Solution. Our robots will crawl your website, will find the un-indexed pages and will force the pages from the supplemental index to the main index. Yes, our robots can determine which of your pages are lying in the Supplemental Index. Our deep-indexing campaign not only improves your site’s deep-indexing but also improves search engine ranking for your keyword phrases. Please click here for more information about our premiere service.



HR organizes Team building Activity – Sequel 2

Thursday, April 10th, 2008

Howdy everyone! Last monday, the RedAlkemi HR department organized yet another fun filled team building activity for us. We all had lot of fun and exchange of many bugups & boo’s while every team (including Spartans, D-company, Invincible, PDME, Technicals & the Link Building team) fought really hard to win the titles. The first game was Spoon Ball Relay Race, in which 4 members of each team had to walk with a ball in a spoon held by his/her mouth in minimum time and fouls. Sound’s easy? Well.. actually it’s not ! :) The Technical team won this game, thanks to Mehar for giving them an excellent start. In the other game one team had to hide 10 things in the venue (Entertainment Center) and the other team had to search those items in minimum time. In this Treasure Hunt game, D-Company won and took away the box of chocolates. Enjoy the pictures:

 

spoon race redalkemisoon race redalkemiteam redalkemispoon race redalkemi teamteam building anuradha



The SEO war of redirects: 301 vs 302 vs meta-refresh tag

Thursday, April 10th, 2008

With this post, let’s discuss the much talked about 301 vs 302 vs Meta-refresh tags to understand which one in the most ideal one to use from the Search Engine Optimization point of view and in which situation? First, let’s have a look oni this small cartoon I’ve made for a general idea about redirects, then we will go into details so that the whole information is easy for you to digest :)

301 302 RedAlkemi redirect

301 Redirects
301 redirect is undoubtedly the safest way to redirect a website as all Search Engines treat a ‘301 redirect’ in same way ie. They simply pass all the link value, juice, ranking etc to the redirected page. A 301 redirect tells a search engine that the requested page has permanently been shifted to a different location so search engines simply ignore the original URL and index the destination URL foreg. If we 301 redirect a website that is about watches (let’s say - awesome-watches.com) which is ranking for keyword ‘wrist watches’ to another website – cool-watches.com, the search engines will simply ignore awesome-watches.com and will index and rank cool-watches.com for the keyword ‘wrist watches’. 301 redirect is also the most handy tool to handle canonical URLs. The most common cases when we use 301 redirects are:

  • If the page is deleted or permanently moved.

  • You want a new top level domain for your website without damaging your link value and rankings. To serve either of the version of www vs non-www. This is done with a combination of 301 redirect and mod-rewrite.

  • Content duplication. For example you may 301 redirect www.yoursite.com/index.htm to www.yourwebsite.com

    If you have many topically relevant but outdated websites which your are not willing to maintain anymore, you may slowly redirecting the outdated websites to the most current website. But beware, if there are many websites, redirect them one by one slowly as otherwise you might end up getting flagged for being a spammer. Please take a note that At SMX, all the engineers from all the search engines made a statement that 301 redirect will not carry the full effect if the content of the redirecting website is topically not the same. We should avoid redirecting our website to a site which is topically irrelevant to our website. For e.g. if you are planning to redirect (301) your website about cars, then you should not redirect it to a website selling watches. An inappropriate redirect will not lead to any benefit to your website.

302 Redirects
302 redirect, also known as temporary redirect tell search engines that the content of the requested URL is temporarily available at a different URL location but will be soon restore to the original URL. So in case of a 301 redirect, the search engines will index the original URL, but they will extract the content content from the 301 redirected URL. This is the the most dicey redirect that you can use on your website as all the search engines tend to treat a 302 redirect differently with lots of exceptions to what they claim. Here is a link for any budding 302 hijacker :)
Mattcutts has explained here with simple examples, how Google, MSN and yahoo handle a 302 redirect. You may consider using a 302 redirect within your website pages (ie. Onsite redirect), when you want to serve search engines a simple version of a URL and the content from a different page with a complex URL, since simple and short URL’s look more click-enticing in the Search Engine result pages foreg www.yourwebsite.com can be 302 redirected to www.yourwebsite.com/userdata?user=12xc2?id=crap
However you must never try a cross domain 302-redirect.
MSN treats a 302 redirect exactly how it treats a 301 permanent redirect, that is, it will always ignore the original URL and instead index the destination URL. Same is the case with Yahoo, but yahoo reserves the right to make exceptions to this declaration (which they do at many occasions). You must be very careful as 302 redirects are often the default redirect in host control panels and JavaScript. Many meta redirects produce the same 302 redirect effect.

Meta-refresh Redirects
Actually a meta-refresh is not a redirect but it is s simple instruction to the browser to refresh the page after a certain period of time (content in seconds, with or with out a new supplied URL instead of the current one). It is situated in the head of the HTML page and looks something like this: <meta http-equiv=”refresh” content=”0;url=http://www.anotherdomain.com/category/shoes.htm”>
All search engines understand a meta-redirect but again, tend to react differently depending on the content figure. If the content time is 0 or 1 second, most search engines take it as a permanent 301 redierct; anything more than 1 is normally considered a 302 redirect. Use meta-refresh only if you your current hosting provider doesn’t allow a 301, primarily because the W3C’s Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (7.4) discourage the creation of auto-refreshing pages, since most web browsers do not allow the user to disable or control the refresh rate and secondly Spammers use a meta-refresh to refresh the page after every 5 seconds to save themselves from any type of ranking punishment. I am sure you don’t want to look like a spammer. If you want get into details here are some really useful threads on meta-refresh tags

Javascript Redirects
Don’t use Javascript redirect as search engines simply don’t understand it or tend to confuse it as a 302 redirect.



Geographical Targeting: Factors You Can’t Afford to Overlook

Monday, April 7th, 2008

Have you ever wondered why an Australian website (yourdomain.com.au) physically hosted in Australia ranks higher when searched on Google.com.au than an evilcompetitor.com hosted in Europe? Or Does a country-specific domain name (TLD) (e.g., .co.uk) actually helps if someone is targeting a specific country market? These are some of the most common issues which many webmasters across the globe face when they are looking to rank a website at different country specific search engines (ie. Google.com/.co.uk/.com.au etc).

I recently wrote this guest post at seomoz.org, featuring the major issues that you must consider while Geographically Targeting a website for country specific search engines (without getting penalized for content duplication). You must read it, I know that it’s not all that comprehensive but I am quite sure that it will give you a good insight of ranking discrepancies in different geographies. Cheers ! :)



Meet the family: Meta name= “robots”

Tuesday, April 1st, 2008

In my last post on SEO feast, I offered you so many things to eat – PR Bar, optimizer beer, Energy drinks and what not. But did you ever wonder, what do Search Engine bots eat? Yes they love eating fresh content & HTML on your website; but there are few things on your website, that you never want to feed bots with like - flash, silly javascripts, duplicate content, affiliate links (that pass link juice) etc. So how do you stop these dumb bots – Simple, by defining robots meta tag values:

<meta name=”robots” value=” <value> “

I just happened to stumble upon this cute flicker pic of five robots, I could relate to Google, Yahoo, MSN, Ask & Altavista. So I just simply used my paint brush and wrote their names accordingly. Looks so cool to me ! :)

botfamily1.jpg

And now that you have met the bot family, let’s discuss different values you can serve to these witty Search Engine bots:

  1. Index: Allows bots to index the page. This a default value, you need not define it on all the pages.
  2. Noindex: Search Engines will not index the page and hence the page will not appear in its results.
  3. None: It’s like shortcut for noindex, nofollow. “None” gives strict instruction to search engines – Don’t do any thing with the page at all.
  4. Follow: Tell search engine bots, to follow the links on the page and take them as a vote to the linking website ie. pass the link juice.
  5. Nofollow: Gives strict instruction to bots not to follow any links at all.
  6. Noarchive: Stops paparazzi bots from showing the cached version of the page in its reults.
  7. Nocache: Prevents MSN/Live to show the cached version of the page in its results.
  8. Nosnippet: Stops the bots from not only reflecting a snippet of the page in search results but also doesn’t let them cache the page.
  9. Noodp: Makes sure that search engines don’t use the description of the containing page in DMOZ as the snippet for your page in the search results.
  10. Noydir: Works just like noodp, but used exclusively for Yahoo!

BTW, you may also want to go through our comprehensive article on Working with robots.txt file. I hope you enjoyed the post. Cheers!
Image credit:
flickr.