StepForth Web Marketing Inc.
Your Weekly 'Step Forth' into the World of Search Engines
Wednesday - September 27th, 2006

Highlight of the Week
> Ross Dunn Answers SEO Questions - #3

The Major Player Update (It's Google all the way!)
> Google Announces Update for Holiday Season
> Google Release Responds to Copyright Issues
> Some Insight into Google Analytics
Net Reality
> Google Turns 8!
  Images not loading? - View the online version
This could be a result of your Outlook settings
  Subscribe

Visit StepForth Search Engine Placement

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.

Ask Ross DunnHighlight of the Week

Ross Dunn Answers SEO Questions - #3

If you have a question you would like to ask please send it over. Please keep in mind, however, that I do not have the time to review websites free of charge but I will do my best to answer pointed questions like the ones shown below. Please submit your SEO questions here.

Question: "Supplementary Results"

Hey, I have been searching around forums and such, trying to get an answer and can't seem to find one. What determines whether pages get sent to the supplemental or omitted results section of Google? The closest info I could find is that means that there is duplicate content. However, on my reciprocal links pages, there is no unique content as I'm sure those links are posted on many hundreds of other websites duplicated across the web. What can I do to get my currently "omitted results" pages into the main index section of Google? Thanks in advance for your help.

Answer:

This is a great question and one that, astonishingly, I have never been asked which made it even more fun to answer. First, however, I want to provide a little background for readers that may not be familiar with this topic.

What is a Supplemental Result?
Supplemental results are generally pages that Google has determined to be secondary to other, more relevant pages that Google has indexed on your website. In effect, supplementary results are actually a secondary database of results that are only called upon when the most obscure queries force Google to check all its indexed resources.

What is an Omitted Result?
Omitted results are supplemental results that are not listed within your search results because they are even less relevant than the supplemental results shown.

Does Your Site Have Supplemental Results?

If your site has more than a few pages it is very likely you do have supplemental pages in Google. To find out if you do just go to Google and type in the query shown in red (including the asterisks): site:www.yourdomain.com ***

This search will provide you with a listing of all supplemental and omitted results for your website.

What Determines if a Page Will Become a Supplemental Result?

An indexed page becomes a supplementary result when it is less relevant than other page(s) in your website. As a result, the best way to avoid supplemental pages is by ensuring that every page within your site uses unique content and provides excellent and relevant information. This way you will have a better chance of having Google determine that your pages are second to none. Note that this does, by no means, guarantee you will not have supplemental pages. After all, you may have a page with “A+” content and a page devoted to a similar topic with “A” content. In this case the lesser page may still become supplemental because no matter how good it is, it is still second to the better one.

Should You Consider Supplementary Results Bad?

In general supplementary results should be avoided because they are pages less likely to be found in a search engine. If, however, your website has been finely crafted and you can see that your supplementary results still represent good quality pages you may simply be a victim of Google’s need to perform content triage; picking only the best content and leaving the others to fade into supplementary purgatory.

Additional Information

If you want to look into this further here are some links to more information on Supplementary Results:

- http://searchenginewatch.com/showPage.html?page=3071371
- http://forums.digitalpoint.com/showthread.php?t=141198


Question: "Good URLs, Session Variables and Backlinks"

Ross,

I really liked your September 7th, 2006 article on Search Engine Strategies for Webmasters. It broke down the important design pitfalls and solutions in a simple but thorough article. I do have a couple of questions, that it would please me if you answered.

1) Is it ok to have .php extensions in the URL as long as you substitute the "?", "=", and "@" characters in the addresses with "/"?

2) Are SESSION variables and POST variables friendly to search engines?

3) Do you need to pay to get top 10 or top 20 rankings?

4) How much relevance is added by having links from other domains to your website?

Thanks again for the great article,
Jim


Answer:

Hi Jim, thank you for the accolades, I assume you are thanking me for my "Is Your Website Search Engine Friendly? Your Personal Checklist" article. I know it got published in some places on September 7. I have answered your questions below:

1) Is it ok to have .php extensions in the URL as long as you substitute the "?", "=", and "@" characters in the addresses with "/"?

In general your statement is correct. If you replace the extraneous characters (?, &, =) with brackets you will improve the search engine friendliness of your website. But be sure that you do not have too many directories appearing within your URL’s because Google has been known to stop indexing sites that have lengthy directory structures. This video from Google Engineer Matt Cutts describes this very issue.

For samples and more tips on improving your URL’s please go to the second half of my SEO Answers article from August 2nd where I discuss “What Are Good and Bad URL’s and How to Fix the Bad Ones”.

2) Are SESSION variables and POST variables friendly to search engines?

Session variables are not used by search engines so if your site requires them you are effectively shutting the door on search engine indexing. As for post variables, I would need more information before I could answer this question. Generally POST variables are passed when a user interacts using a form so the search engine would not encounter this issue – making it a moot point.

3) Do you need to pay to get top 10 or top 20 rankings?

There are two answers to this question:

a) Do you mean can the top positions be purchased? In effect you can’t technically pay to get a top ranking because those rankings are ‘organic’; they are created not by humans but rather by software based solely on the relevancy and popularity of the pages that the search engine spiders have found.

b) If you mean do you have to pay an SEO to get top organic rankings? No you certainly do not have to pay for top rankings on the search engines. That said, there are many situations where it may be a smarter move for you to outsource your search engine optimization needs. For example, are you trying to attain a ranking in a competitive market area? In this case obtaining a top ranking may require a level of SEO knowledge that you don’t have the time to attain. Your time may also be better spent doing what you are best at; making your business more profitable.

If you do not want to outsource your SEO needs then there are plenty of online forums and websites designed to provide you with the knowledge required to conduct your own SEO. Here is a short list:

- www.searchengineguide.com
- www.searchenginewatch.com
- www.webmasterworld.com
- and of course, StepForth’s SEO blog at news.stepforth.com

If you are looking to find the right tools I have a page that is meant to help you which is devoted to recommended SEO tools.

4) How much relevance is added by having links from other domains to your website?

First, let me set the scene here. The links you are discussing are called “backlinks” and the resulting benefit is called “link popularity”. So, to restate the question: “how important is link popularity to the overall relevance of your website as perceived by the search engines?” Link popularity is extremely important because search engines partially determine how authoritative a website is by how many other related websites have linked to it; they are considered votes of confidence. Note that I bolded ‘related’, this is a crucial point because backlinks from websites that are not related to yours can be worthless. For example, the search engines do not consider a link from a hair salon website to a ski tour company’s website as a very powerful vote of confidence because there is no obvious relation between the two topics.

To top off my answers I want to also note something important related to link building: do not sign up for a link building program (free or not) that offers you hundreds or more links within no time at all. The fact is that these backlinks are not likely to be very relevant to your website AND, most importantly if Google sees that your website has gained a ton of backlinks in very little time they will be suspicious. It is not unheard of for a website to be punished by Google if they appear to have gotten a great many backlinks in a short period. Google does not enjoy being 'gamed' so tread softly and build your backlinks slowly but methodically and pay attention to the best links. In my August SEO Answers article I provided more backlink tips in the response titled: What Exactly Are Good Backlinks?

By Ross Dunn - CEO

Past SEO Questions Answered:

 

Does a domain name play a part in SEO?

How important are unique IP's?

How to remove a blacklisting on Yahoo

What exactly are good backlinks?

What are good and bad URLs and how to fix the bad ones.

 

Printable Versions of the Highlight of the Week: Word Format, Adobe PDF Format

We Want To Answer Your SEO Questions for Free!
Have you got some search engine optimization questions you are dying to get answered? We want to make the StepForth Weekly more interactive so we want to answer your questions. Just visit our questions page and submit your question.

What we are looking for are pointed questions about ranking issues and best practices. Please note that we will only review website's on a paid consultation basis, give us a call if you need consultation or try our free search engine optimization review.

Privacy Note: we reserve the right to post your question and our answer in a future newsletter so please keep this in mind.

The Major Players: All Google

Google Announces Update for Holiday Season
A Sept 25th posting from the SEO Blog by Ross Dunn

This holiday season Google has announced a search engine update geared towards a bolder integration of Google Base data.

At the latest Professional Ebay Sellers Alliance Summit (PESA) Google stated that they would provide a 'refine your search' option to those obviously searching for products using Google.com. The search box would appear after a product search was entered at which point, should a user use the refined search option, Google Base data would be provided.

According to the PCAdvisor article that described this announcement Google noted that rankings within these Google Base listings "will be determined by the attributes that the sellers listed for the product as well as by relevancy."

What is Google Base?
The "Learn More" page provided by Google describes it well:
"Google Base is a place where you can easily submit all types of online and offline content, which we'll make searchable on Google (if your content isn't online yet, we'll put it there). You can describe any item you post with attributes, which will help people find it when they do related searches. In fact, based on your items' relevance, users may find them in their results for searches on Froogle, Google Maps and even our main Google web search."

At this time I can't say that I have come across anything that appeared to be Google Base data in my online searching so I am sure this update is welcome to Google Base users. Perhaps it will herald an increase in user profits thanks to the boost in visibility. According to Google, Google Base content is actually inserted into some Google web searches now but such inclusion appears to be a side note when reading the description above.

So What Now?
If you haven't already go and checkout Google Base and insert your products/services. The system is totally free and you just might get a little more visibility this holiday season.

by Ross Dunn - CEO


Google Release Responds to Copyright Issues
A Sept 27th posting from the SEO Blog by Ross Dunn

Yesterday (the 26 of September), a Mr. David Eun, VP of Content Partnerships posted a blanket notice titled "Our approach to content" describing Google's respect for copyrights. I recommend reading this posting but if you want the Coles notes... here is a snippet that sums it up well:


"... over the years we’ve come up with three primary principles to ensure that we respect content owners and protect their rights:

  • we respect copyright;
  • we let owners choose whether we index their content in our products;
  • we try to bring benefit back to content owners by partnering with them."

Mr. Eun does a good job of representing Google in this post. In fact, by highlighting how flexible Google is I think he does a great job of showing how silly this whole whiney copyright issue has become. I mean come on! If you (the copyright owner) wants money from Google, just be honest about it and don't try to attack them under the guise of copyright infringement. If you don't want to be listed in Google it is a very simple matter of implementing the proper tags.

by Ross Dunn - CEO


Some Insight into Google Analytics
A Sept 27th posting from the SEO Blog by Ross Dunn

Here is just a quick post recommending that you read the following interview with Brett Crosby at Web Analytics World. Brett is the Senior Manager of Google Analytics and he discusses the current status as well as the future of Google Analytics. Do you want to know more about how to track your statistics? Check out Google's free Conversion University.

The free tool that it is Google Analytics offers some very tempting functionality for any webmasterand we currently use it as a secondary stats source but I still swear by ClickTracks. ClickTracks may be a paid solution but I find it very flexible and the reports are extremely easy to understand.

by Ross Dunn - CEO

The Net Reality

Google Turns 8 Today!

Well you turned 8 years old today you playful little devil. You have been a temperamental child at times and lord knows you don't follow orders very well but at least you get straight A's for knowledge.

Cheers from the Staff at StepForth Search Engine Placement!

 

Visit the SEO BLOG Regularly for Daily SEO News & 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."