StepForth Web Marketing Inc.
Your Weekly Step Forth into the World of Search Engines
Wednesday - June 7th, 2006
  Highlight of the Week
Being a Bigdaddy Jagger Meister>>
  The Major Players
Google's Growing Online Office Adds Spreadsheets >>
Google Expresses Second Thoughts About Chinese Censorship >>
  Net Reality
Million Dollar Homepage Beats Extortion Attempt >>
  Images not loading? - View the online version
This could be a result of your Outlook settings

Visit the StepForth Placement Homepage

StepForth's News Section
StepForth's latest search engine placement services
StepForth now contributes articles to both
Search Engine Guide and Web ProNews
Do you want to hear about the news as it comes?
The SEO Blog is our daily events post.
Free SEO Review Take the StepForth Review - Find out how search engine friendly your website is today

Highlight of the Week

Being a Bigdaddy Jagger Meister

It took a little while to start to figure it out. Such things almost always do. After months of observation, research, discussion and debate, Search Engine Optimization experts appear to be getting a better handle on the effects of Google's Bigdaddy infrastructure upgrades.

From mid-winter until this week, StepForth has strongly advised our clients to be conservative with any changes to their sites until enough time has passed for us, along with many others in the SEO community to observe, analyze and articulate our impressions of the upgrade. About ten days ago, the light at the end of the intellectual tunnel became eminently visible and SEO discussion forums are abuzz with productive and proactive conversations regarding how to deal with a post-Bigdaddy Google environment.

To make the long back-story short, in September 2005, Google began implementation of a three-part algorithm update that became known as the Jagger Update. Shortly after completing the algo update in late November, Google began an upgrading of their server and data storage network that was dubbed the Bigdaddy Infrastructure Upgrade. The Bigdaddy upgrade took several months to completely roll out across all of Google's data centers, which are rumoured to number in the hundreds.

In other words, the world's most popular search engine has, in one way or another, been in a constant state of flux since September. The only solid information SEOs had to pass on to curious clients amounted to time tested truisms about good content, links and site structure. Being the responsible sort we are, no good SEO wanted to say anything definite for fear of being downright wrong and misdirecting others.

Starting in the middle of May and increasing towards the end of the month, ideas and theories that had been thrown around SEO related forums and discussion groups started to solidify into the functional knowledge that makes up the intellectual inventory of good SEO firms.

Guided by the timely information leaks from Google's quality control czar Matt Cutts , discussion in the SEO community surrounding Bigdaddy related issues has been led by members of forums WebMasterWorld , SEW ( 1 ) ( 2 ) ( 3 ), Threadwatch , SERoundtable ( 1 ) ( 2 ) ( 3 ), and Cre8asite ( 1 ) ( 2 ). SEO writers Aaron Wall , Jarrod Hunt , and Mark Daoust have also added their observations to the conversation in a number of separate articles.

By now, most good SEOs should be able to put their fingers on issues related to Bigdaddy fairly quickly and help work out a strategy for sites that were adversely affected by the upgrade. The first thing to note about the cumulative effects of Jagger and Bigdaddy is the intent of Google engineers to remove much of the poor quality or outright spammy commercial content that was clogging up their search results.

The intended targets of the Bigdaddy update go beyond sites that commit simple violations against Google's webmaster guidelines to include affiliate sites, results gleaned from other search tools, duplicate content, poor quality sites and sites with obviously gamey link networks. In some cases, Google was targeting sites designed primarily to attract users to click on paid-search advertisements.

After the implementation of the algo update and infrastructure upgrades, SEOs have seen changes in the following areas: Site/Document Quality Scoring, Duplicate Content Filtering and Link Intention Analysis.

The first area noted is site or document quality scoring. Did you know there are now more web documents online than there are people on the planet? Many if not most of those documents are highly professional and some are sort of scrappy. While Google is not looking for perfection, it is trying to assess which pages are more useful than others and attention to quality design and content is one of the criteria.

Quality design simply means giving Google full access to all areas of the site webmasters want spidered. Smart site and directory structures tend to place spiderable information as high in the directory tree as possible. While Google is capable of spidering deeply into database sites, it appears to prefer to visit higher level directories much more frequently. We have noted that Google agent visits do tend to correspond with update times set via Google Sitemaps.

Accessibility and usability issues are thought to make up elements of the Jagger algorithm update, marking the way visitors use a site or document and the amount of time they spend engaged in a user-session associated with a site important factors in ranking and placement outcomes. Internal and outbound links should be placed with care in order to make navigating through and away from a site as easy as possible for site visitors.

Another quality design issue involves letting Google know which "version" of your site is the correct one. For most, a website can be access with or without typing the "www" part of the URL. (ie: http://www.stepforth.com , http://stepforth.com , http://www.stepforth.com/index.shtml ) This presents a rather funny problem for Google. Because links directed into a site might vary in the way they are written, sometimes it doesn't know which "version" of a site is the correct one to keep in its cache. To Google, each of the variations of the URL above could be perceived as unique websites, an issue known as "canonicalization", a subject Matt Cutts addressed on his blog in early January.

'Suppose you want your default URL to be http://www.example.com . You can make your webserver so that if someone requests http://example.com/ , it does a 301 (permanent) redirect to http://www.example.com/ . That helps Google know which url you prefer to be canonical. Adding a 301 redirect can be an especially good idea if your site changes often (e.g. dynamic content, a blog, etc.)."

Quality content is a bit harder to manage and a lot harder to define. Content is a word used to describe the stuff in or on a web document and could include everything from text and images, Flash files, audio or video and links.

There are two basic rules in regards to content. It should be there to inform and assist the site user's experience and it should be, (in as much as possible), original.

Making an easy to use site that provides visitors with the information they are looking for is the responsibility of webmasters but there are a few simple ways to show you are serious about its presentation.

Focus on your topic and stick to it. Many of the sites and documents that have found themselves demoted or de-listed during the Bigdaddy upgrade were sites that delved across several topics at the same time without presenting a clear theme. Given the option between documents with clear themes and documents without clear themes, Google's choice is obvious.

Google is working to weed out duplicate content. Google appears to be looking for incidents of duplicate content in order to try to promote the originator of that content over the replications. This has hit sites in the vertical search sector; affiliate marketing sector, real estate sites, and even retail sites that carry brand name products, especially hard. Several shopping or product focused database sites have seen hundreds or even thousands of pages falling out of Google's main index.

In many cases, there is little or nothing to do for this except to start writing unique content for products listed in the databases of such sites. Many real estate sites, for example, use the same local information sources as their competitors do and all tend to draw content from the same selection of MLS listings. It's not that Google thinks this content is "useless", it's that Google already has several other examples of the same content and is not interested in displaying duplicate listings.

Many of the listings previously enjoyed by large database driven sites have fallen into a Google index known as the supplemental listings database. Supplemental listings are introduced to the general listings shown to Google users when there are no better examples to choose from to meet the users search query. This is the same index that is often referred to as the "Google Sandbox".

Sponsored SEO Tools


Free
WebPosition 4 Trial


Monitor Rankings
OptiTools:
Build Link Popularity

The last major element noted in the discussions surrounding Bigdaddy is how much more robust Google's link analysis has become. Aside from site quality and duplicate content issues, most webmasters will find answers to riddles posed by Bigdaddy in their network of links.

In order to ferret out the intent of webmasters, Google has increased the importance of links, both inbound and outbound. Before the updates, an overused tactic for strong placement at Google saw webmasters trying to bulk up on incoming links from where ever they could. This practice saw the rise of link farms, link exchanges and poorly planned reciprocal link networks.

One of the ways Google tries to judge the intent of webmasters is by mapping the network of incoming and outgoing links associated with a domain. Links, according to the gospel of Google, should exist only as navigation or information references that benefit the site visitor. Google examines the outbound links from a page or document and compares them against its list of inbound links, checking to see how many match up and how many are directed towards, and/or coming from pages featuring unrelated or irrelevant content. Links pointing to or from irrelevant content or reciprocal links between topically unrelated sites are easily spotted and their value to the overall site ranking downgraded or even eliminated.

The subject of links brings up an uncomfortable flaw in Google's inbound link analysis that is being referred to as Google Bowling. As part of its scan of the network of links associated with a document or URL, Google keeps a detailed record of who links to who, how long the link has been established, if there is a recip link back, along with several other items.

One of those items appears to be an examination of how and why webmasters might purchase links from another site. While bought-links are not technically a rankings killer, a bulk of such links purchased from un-relevant sites in a short period of time, can effectively destroy a site or document's current or potential rankings. In an article published at WebProNews last autumn, Michael Perdone from e-TrafficJams speculates on the issue.

Google has tried to deal with the predatory practice of "Google Bowling" by considering the behaviour of webmasters whose site have seen a number of inbound links from "bad neighbourhoods" suddenly appear. If a site that has incoming links from bad places also has or creates links directed out-bound to bad places, the incoming links are judged more harshly. If, on the other hand, a website has a sudden influx of bad-neighbourhood links but does not contain outbound-links directed to bad places, the inbound ones might not be judged as harshly.

The combination of the Bigdaddy upgrade and the Jagger algorithm update have made Google a better search engine and are precursors to the integration of video content and other information pulled from other Google services such as Google Base, Google Maps and Google Groups in the general search results.

Free website reviewBefore the completion of both, Google's search results were increasingly displaying a number of poor quality results stemming from a legion of scraped content "splog" sites and phoney directories that had sprung up in efforts to exploit the AdSense payment system. Bigdaddy and Jagger is a combined effort to offer improved, more accurate rankings while at the same time, expanding Google's ability to draw and distribute content across its multiple arms and networks.

Moving forward, that is what users should expect Google to do. Google is no longer a set of static results updated on a timed schedule. It is constantly updating and rethinking its rankings, especially in light of the number of people trying to use those rankings for their own commercial gain.

The effect of the duo upgrades seems to be settling out. Credible, informative sites should have nothing to worry about in the post-Bigdaddy environment. As Google is trying to move into the most mainstream areas of modern marketing, credibility is its chief concern. The greatest threat to Google's dominance does not come from other tech firms. It comes from the users themselves who, if displeased with results being shown by Google, could migrate en masse to another search engine.

by Jim Hedger, News Editor
Major Player Update

Google's Growing Online Office Adds Spreadsheets

Earlier this week, Google introduced another server-side software product designed to chip away at Microsoft's control of desktop applications. Google Spreadsheets is an online competitor to Microsoft's Excel package that, like Google's recent online word-processing application, Writely , allows multiple users from the same workgroup to access and alter documents.

Google Spreadsheets shares many features and similar icons with Excel though, being web-based, include only the most essential functions. To the right hand side of the screen is a discussion area where multiple users can "meet" in a chat environment to work together on a document.

Google Spreadsheets supports and saves to a number of file types including Excel, CSV and HTML. While this version is not likely to replace Excel in most business environments, it appears as if it could be a very useful complementary product, allowing users to import data from the more complex Excel environment and share it with coworkers in remote locations.


Google Expresses Second Thoughts About Chinese Censorship

Google co-founder Sergey Brin admitted to reporters in Washington yesterday that Google has compromised its values in relation to Chinese government censorship of Google results.

Speaking to journalists near Capitol Hill where he testified on Tuesday, Brin noted, "We felt that perhaps we could compromise our principles but provide ultimately more information for the Chinese and be a more effective service and perhaps make more of a difference, "however he acknowledged that Google decided to abide by "...a set of rules that we weren't comfortable with."

The admission stems from intense criticism Google has received from many quarters in the United States and internationally for acquiescing to the demands of the Chinese government to censor or limit information shown to Chinese Internet users. In his remarks, Brin noted that rivals MSN and Yahoo have received far less public scrutiny or pressure than Google, even though Google only began censoring results after the Chinese government placed a far more restrictive filter on results from Google.com shown in China .

"Perhaps now the principled approach makes more sense," Brin said. "It's perfectly reasonable to do something different, to say, 'Look, we're going to stand by the principle against censorship and we won't actually operate there.' That's an alternate path," Brin said. "It's not where we chose to go right now, but I can sort of see how people came to different conclusions about doing the right thing."

While he did not offer any suggestion that Google was going to reverse its decision or introduce a new policy in regards to Chinese censorship, the statement shows a high degree of transparent, public reflection on Brin's part. According to the Associated Press, Google is currently in discussions with Chinese authorities and is working to make another deal before revisiting its decision to continue operating in China or to pull out.

by Jim Hedger, News Editor

 

The Net Reality

Million Dollar Homepage Beats Extortion Attempt

Remember the "Million Dollar Homepage" gimmick? Last year, a 22-year old UK student Alex Tew had a brilliant but simple idea. Why not make a page of advertisements priced at $1/pixil. Even with Tew's 100-pixil minimum, the smallest of ads would be about the size of a large poppy seed.

It took Tew less than nine months to sell over $1million dollars worth of space on his homepage. It took hackers only one more day to figure out a way to try to extort cash from Tew's efforts.

After selling his final pixils over eBay the night before, Tew awoke one morning to find his site, on which he promised to carry all the advertisements purchased for five years, was very slow. Hours later it crashed altogether.

Tew and his ISP, Sitelutions, investigated and found that the Million Dollar Homepage was being disabled by the largest Denial of Service (DoS) attack Sitelutions VP Russell Weiss had ever seen.

Tew had a good idea who was behind the attack. About a week previously, Tew had received an email from hackers going by the name, "The Dark Group", demanding $5000 from him within three days of selling the final ads. According to their email, "... it's not much money, from the news we heard about you and the amount of money you earned via your Web site."

After the initial DoS attack, Tew received another message from the group, this time demanding $50,000. Instead of giving into extortion, Tew took a different path.

Due to the publicity he had received for his audacious promotion, Tew was able to strike a deal with a currently unnamed Internet security firm, which enabled his site to go live again. He also communicated with the FBI which has begun an investigation.

In the end, the publicity has increased hits to Tew's blog and commercial sites as well as adding to the experiences Tew will be documenting in his new book and on the inevitable lecture circuit.

by Jim Hedger, News Editor
 
Visit the SEO BLOG Regularly for Daily SEO Tips & Updates

If you have any questions please do not hesitate to call the StepForth staff:
Toll-Free: 1-877-385-5526 | Local: 385-1190
http://www.stepforth.com

To unsubscribe from this weekly newsletter simply reply to news@stepforth.com
and include "unsubscribe" as the subject.

Important ©Copyright Note: readers are welcome to republish the content from StepForth Weekly newsletters
but we do require credit in the format that follows: "Article by <author>, StepForth Search Engine Placement Inc."