Sunday, 31 July 2016

Android Nougat may arrive in August with manual camera exposure


Manual exposure control is reportedly coming back to stock Android, and we're expecting it to drop sometime in August. Having vanished from earlier preview builds of Android Nougat, the camera control has returned. According to Android Police, exposure control appears when you tap the screen to focus. A slider on the right side of the screen lets you adjust exposure, and seems pretty straightforward: slide up to allow more light, or down to make your picture a bit darker. We're not sure why the screenshots captured by AP have three different looks, but there could be three different settings you…

This story continues at The Next Web


4 Post-Conversion Autoresponder Tactics to Keep Your Leads Alive by @@iconiContent

Bring your leads back from the dead with an engaging autoresponder. Aaron Orendorff shares four post-conversion tactics to do that.

The post 4 Post-Conversion Autoresponder Tactics to Keep Your Leads Alive by @@iconiContent appeared first on Search Engine Journal.

Saturday, 30 July 2016

Build a programming career with the Complete Front-End to Back-End Coding Bundle (95% Off)


Learning to code is an increasingly valuable investment in your own skill set, with greater demand for programming basics rising every day. And while there's a labyrinth of online courses offering cheap instruction, many of them fall short on quality and qualification. You'll find true, high-caliber training in the Complete Front-End to Back-End Coding Bundle, delivering an essential foundation in widely used programming languages such as Django, Scala, Scheme, Linux, and more. For a limited time you can get started at 95 percent off from TNW Deals. The Complete Front-End to Back-End Coding Bundle delivers a direct path to confident…

This story continues at The Next Web


The Effectiveness of Search by @annaleacrowe

SEM is considered one of the most powerful marketing channels. But does SEM really help drive traffic to your site? It's a question many search marketers have heard from clients, especially since SEM is taking up a large chunk of marketing budgets.

The post The Effectiveness of Search by @annaleacrowe appeared first on Search Engine Journal.

Dumb & Dumber: Houston Lawyer Sues Over Review

The Houston lawyer who decided that he needed to show a reviewer that they “need to learn the consequences of their actions,”  for a bad review must not have gotten the message that suing customers over online reviews is a terrible idea. The act is usually dumb* and the consequences almost always counter to the interests of the … Continue reading Dumb & Dumber: Houston Lawyer Sues Over Review


Friday, 29 July 2016

Report: Clinton staff emails were part of DNC breach (and Julian Assange may have them)


After last week's email dump that saw nearly 20,000 emails from leading Democratic National Convention leaders end up on WikiLeaks, Julian Assange could be right that this is just the beginning. The Associated Press, just minutes ago confirmed that Clinton emails are part of those accessed by hackers during the recent leak. Assange, the founder of the popular website that plays host to leaked documents, warned that he views it as his mission to do what he can to prevent Hillary Clinton from becoming president of the United States. His reasons, it seems, aren't just political. In an interview with Robert…

This story continues at The Next Web


Long-Form vs Short-Form: How much content helps me rank? [#ChartoftheDay]

Recent analysis has highlighted how more often than not, longer-form content out-performs short-form.


The introduction of "Panda" changed the search landscape quite drastically. No longer was awful, poorly written content dancing around at the top of the SERPs, instead it is wallowing away in the "double digitted" results pages.


The ever-present Brian Dean over at Backlinko recently conducted some analysis of over 1 million Google search results, to answer the question...


Which factors correlate with first page search engine rankings?


It's a great piece, so I'd recommend checking it out. But one of the most pertinent takeaways for us here at Smart Insights, were the findings around content length. It's something as a editors and content creators we wrestle with on a daily basis.


Long-Form Ranks Higher in Google's Search Results Than Short-Form Content


Something that comes as no surprise is that there is a blatant correlation between content length and ranking higher in the SERPs. The fact that the average word count of a Google first page result was 1,890 words, just reinforces this point.


One of the more interesting findings from this research is the notable drop in word count between rankings 1 and 2. Although only a difference of 50 words, it suggests length isn't the only thing Google are looking for.


One theory for long-form content out-performing short-form content is that long content increases your page's topical relevancy, giving Google a greater understanding of the context around your content.


Another theory, suggested by Brian Dean is that typically long-form content generates more social shares, which has long been thought to be a powerful ranking factor.


The main takeaway from this post is to take care with everything you post. If not for your ranking's sake, at very least for your audience.


(P.s I am well aware this post is below the magic 1,890 words; but felt it was a super snippet to help you make positive changes to your content strategy)


SearchCap: AdWords reports, CTR data & Google Maps ads

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

The post SearchCap: AdWords reports, CTR data & Google Maps ads appeared first on Search Engine Land.



Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.


Should SEOs and Marketers Continue to Track and Report on Keyword Rankings? - Whiteboard Friday

Posted by randfish

Is the practice of tracking keywords truly dying? There's been a great deal of industry discussion around the topic of late, and some key points have been made. In today's Whiteboard Friday, Rand speaks to the biggest challenges keyword rank tracking faces today and how to solve for them.



Click on the whiteboard image above to open a high-resolution version in a new tab!

Video Transcription

Howdy, Moz fans, and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week we're going to chat about keyword ranking reports. There have been a few articles that have come out recently on a number of big industry sites around whether SEOs should still be tracking their keyword rankings.

I want to be clear: Moz has a little bit of a vested interest here. And so the question is: Can you actually trust me, who obviously I'm a big shareholder in Moz and I'm the founder, and so I care a lot about how Moz does as a software business. We help people track rankings. Does that mean I'm biased? I'm going to do my best not to be. So rather than saying you absolutely should track rankings, I'm instead going to address what most of these articles have brought up as the problems of rank tracking and then talk about some solutions by which you can do this.

My suspicion is you should probably be rank tracking. I think that if you turn it off and you don't do it, it's very hard to get a lot of the value that we need as SEOs, a lot of the intelligence. It's true there are challenges with keyword ranking reports, but not true enough to avoid doing it entirely. We still get too much value from them.

The case against - and solutions for - keyword ranking data

A. People, places, and things

So let's start with the case against keyword ranking data. First off, "keyword ranking reports are inaccurate." There's personalization, localization, and device type, and that biases and has removed what is the "one true ranking." We've done a bunch of analyses of these, and this is absolutely the case.

Personalization, turns out, doesn't change ranking that much on average. For an individual it can change rankings dramatically. If they visited your website before, they could be historically biased to you. Or if they visited your competitor's, they could be biased. Their previous search history might have biased them in a single session, those kinds of things. But with the removal of Google+ from search results, personalization is actually not as dramatically changing as it used to be. Localization, though, still huge, absolutely, and device differences, still huge.

Solution

But we can address this, and the way to do that is by tracking these things separately. So here you can see I've got a ranking report that shows me my mobile rankings versus my desktop rankings. I think this is absolutely essential. Especially if you're getting a lot of traffic from both mobile and desktop search, you need to be tracking those separately. Super smart. Of course we should do that.

We can do the same thing on the local side as well. So I can say, "Here, look. This is how I rank in Seattle. Here's how I rank in Minneapolis. Here's how I rank in the U.S. with no geographic personalization," if Google were to do that. Those types of rankings can also be pretty good.

It is true that local ranked tracking has gotten a little more challenging, but we've seen that folks like, well Moz itself, but folks like STAT (GetStat), SERPs.com, Search Metrics, they have all adjusted their rank tracking methodologies in order to have accurate local rank tracking. It's pretty good. Same with device type, pretty darn good.

B. Keyword value estimation

Another big problem that is expressed by a number of folks here is we no longer know how much traffic an individual keyword sends. Because we don't know how much an individual keyword sends, we can't really say, "What's the value of ranking for that keyword?" Therefore, why bother to even track keyword rankings?

I think this is a little bit of spurious logic. The leap there doesn't quite make sense to me. But I will say this. If you don't know which keywords are sending you traffic specifically, you still know which pages are receiving search traffic. That is reported. You can get it in your Google Analytics, your Omniture report, whatever you're using, and then you can tie that back to keyword ranking reports showing which pages are receiving traffic from which keywords.

Most all of the ranked tracking platforms, Moz included, has a report that shows you something like this. It says, "Here are the keywords that we believe are likely to have sent these percentages of traffic to this page based on the keywords that you're tracking, based on the pages that are ranking for them, and how much search traffic those pages receive."

Solution

So let's track that. We can look at pages receiving visits from search, and we can look at which keywords they rank for. Then we can tie those together, which gives us the ability to then make not only a report like this, but a report that estimates the value contributed by content and by pages rather than by individual keywords.

In a lot of ways, this is almost superior to our previous methodology of tracking by keyword. Keyword can still be estimated through AdWords, through paid search, but this can be estimated on a content basis, which means you get credit for how much value the page has created, based on all the search traffic that's flowed to it, and where that's at in your attribution lifecycle of people visiting those pages.

C. Tracking rankings and keyword relevancy

Pages often rank for keywords that they aren't specifically targeting, because Google has gotten way better with user intent. So it can be hard or even impossible to track those rankings, because we don't know what to look for.

Well, okay, I hear you. That is a challenge. This means basically what we have to do is broaden the set of keywords that we look at and deal with the fact that we're going to have to do sampling. We can't track every possible keyword, unless you have a crazy budget, in which case go talk to Rob Bucci up at STAT, and he will set you up with a huge campaign to track all your millions of keywords.

Solution

If you have a smaller budget, what you have to do is sample, and you sample by sets of keywords. Like these are my high conversion keywords - I'm going to assume I have a flower delivery business - so flower delivery and floral gifts and flower arrangements for offices. My long tail keywords, like artisan rose varieties and floral alternatives for special occasions, and my branded keywords, like Rand's Flowers or Flowers by Rand.

I can create a bunch of different buckets like this, sample the keywords that are in them, and then I can track each of these separately. Now I can see, ah, these are sets of keywords where I've generally been moving up and receiving more traffic. These are sets of keywords where I've generally been moving down. These are sets of keywords that perform better or worse on mobile or desktop, or better or worse in these geographic areas. Right now I can really start to get true intelligence from there.

Don't let your keyword targeting - your keyword targeting meaning what keywords you're targeting on which pages - determine what you rank track. Don't let it do that exclusively. Sure, go ahead and take that list and put that in there, but then also do some more expansive keyword research to find those broad sets of search terms and phrases that you should be monitoring. Now we can really solve this issue.

D. Keyword rank tracking with a purpose

This one I think is a pretty insidious problem. But for many organizations ranking reports are more of a historical artifact. We're not tracking them for a particular reason. We're tracking them because that's what we've always tracked and/or because we think we're supposed to track them. Those are terrible reasons to track things. You should be looking for reasons of real value and actionability. Let's give some examples here.

Solution

What I want you to do is identify the goals of rank tracking first, like: What do I want to solve? What would I do differently based on whether this data came back to me in one way or another?

If you don't have a great answer to that question, definitely don't bother tracking that thing. That should be the rule of all analytics.


So if your goal is to say, "Hey, I want to be able to attribute a search traffic gain or a search traffic loss to what I've done on my site or what Google has changed out there," that is crucially important. I think that's core to SEO. If you don't have that, I'm not sure how we can possibly do our jobs.

We attribute search traffic gains and losses by tracking broadly, a broad enough set of keywords, hopefully in enough buckets, to be able to get a good sample set; by tracking the pages that receive that traffic so we can see if a page goes way down in its search visits. We can look at, "Oh, what was that page ranking for? Oh, it was ranking for these keywords. Oh, they dropped." Or, "No, they didn't drop. But you know what? We looked in Google Trends, and the traffic demand for those keywords dropped," and so we know that this is a seasonality thing, or a fluctuation in demand, or those types of things.

And we can track by geography and device, so that we can say, "Hey, we lost a bunch of traffic. Oh, we're no longer mobile-friendly." That is a problem. Or, "Hey, we're tracking and, hey, we're no longer ranking in this geography. Oh, that's because these two competitors came in and they took over that market from us."


We could look at would be something like identify pages that are in need of work, but they only require a small amount of work to have a big change in traffic. So we could do things like track pages that rank on page two for given keywords. If we have a bunch of those, we can say, "Hey, maybe just a few on-page tweaks, a few links to these pages, and we could move up substantially." We had a Whiteboard Friday where we talked about how you could do that with internal linking previously and have seen some remarkable results there.

We can track keywords that rank in position four to seven on average. Those are your big wins, because if you can move up from position four, five, six, seven to one, two, three, you can double or triple your search traffic that you're receiving from keywords like that.

You should also track long tail, untargeted keywords. If you've got a long tail bucket, like we've got up here, I can then say, "Aha, I don't have a page that's even targeting any of these keywords. I should make one. I could probably rank very easily because I have an authoritative website and some good content," and that's really all you might need.


We might look at some up-and-coming competitors. I want to track who's in my space, who might be creeping up there. So I should track the most common domains that rank on page one or two across my keyword sets.

I can track specific competitors. I might say, "Hey, Joel's Flower Delivery Service looks like it's doing really well. I'm going to set them up as a competitor, and I'm going to track their rankings specifically, or I'm going to see..." You could use something like SEMrush and see specifically: What are all the keywords they rank for that you don't rank for?

This type of data, in my view, is still tremendously important to SEO, no matter what platform you're using. But if you're having these problems or if these problems are being expressed to you, now you have some solutions.

I look forward to your comments. We'll see you again next week for another edition of Whiteboard Friday. Take care.

Video transcription by Speechpad.com


Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read!

What to Look for in a Professional Content Writer

how to identify a professional writer


Every business needs content. Not the bland, me-too nonsense that frequently clutters up our inboxes and feeds, but genuinely useful, interesting content.


Content that helps a business stand out amid the clutter and noise. Content that moves prospects closer to a sale. Content that can become a powerful differentiator for your company.


And businesses often have a tough time finding the writers who know how to create that type of content over time.


One of the reasons I think organizations struggle is that they don't always know what qualities will make for a genuinely productive, profitable hire. And as you might guess, I have a few strong opinions about that.


So, here's what I think you should look for when you need to hire a content professional to create the marketing that will move your business forward.


A professional content writer has a strong, confident writing voice


A strong, confident writing voice is essential.


Strategy, marketing, and persuasion techniques can be taught (that's what we're here for). Voice, on the other hand, develops over time and needs to come from within a creative, intelligent, sensitive human being.


While a solid writing voice can be developed over time (here's how), your writer won't ever get there without a lot of passion and commitment. Talent doesn't hurt, either.


Look for a writer whose work is interesting, funny, smart, perceptive, and convincing. Look for someone whose writing you just like to read.


Some have it and some don't. Insist on hiring the one who does.


A professional content writer has a solid grasp of spelling, grammar, and usage


Unless you have the bandwidth to add a content editor to your team, your writer needs to have a solid grasp of usage, spelling, and all those mundane issues that can make us look silly when we get them wrong.


Your writing candidates should get their feathers ruffled when someone uses it's for its. Every writer occasionally makes a typo - but for a professional, that should be rare.


A professional content writer finds the intriguing angle


Well-crafted content is important - but if it's not wrapped up in a fascinating package, it probably won't get read or shared.


Strong content writers are capable and creative. They think about your topic in interesting ways. (Mainly because professional writers think about their topics all the time. Occupational hazard. Probably why we're such odd birds.)


A pro knows how to deliver the usefulness that audiences need, but also wraps it up in unusual hooks and angles that will capture attention and engage curiosity.


A professional content writer understands the elements of content that sells


There are plenty of writers out there who can write a pleasing sentence or paragraph.


But a content professional also understands how content can move prospects smoothly down the path from stranger to interested prospect to delighted customer.


She understands headlines and why content gets shared. She knows what type of content works well in blog posts and what's better saved for a landing page or an email message.


A professional content writer lives and breathes strategy. Which brings me to my next point …


A professional content writer can articulate why she's using a particular content strategy


If you have a writer working for you, that person should be able to tell you precisely why she's taken a particular angle with a blog post, video script, or white paper.


She can explain how your content program ties into your search strategy and why she's using the number 8.4 in the headline, rather than rounding it up to 9.


Give her a chance and she'll talk your ear off about the structure of bullet point fascinations, benefits over features, and the call to action.


The people who revel in this stuff are the ones who create compelling marketing content that builds your business. Whether or not you find it exciting, your writer needs to.


She needs to be able to tell you why, so your entire organization moves in the same direction.


(And on your part, you need to take the time to listen to those explanations. Don't hire a pro and then second-guess every move she makes. If you want great content, you need to give your writer the space to craft that greatness.)


A professional content writer has a commitment to quality and ongoing education


If content is important to your business, you need a professional, not an interested amateur.


And one of the hallmarks of the professional is commitment. Commitment to getting better over time, to staying on top of developments in the field, to a lifetime of learning.


Raw talent to write is important, and an understanding of strategy is important. But you also want to find someone who takes the profession seriously - as a profession - and continues to sharpen and refine his skills.


From search algorithms to social platforms to what types of headlines are performing well these days - professional writers need to stay plugged in to what's changing in our profession.


A serious content professional also takes the initiative to become an authority in the topics he writes about. He interviews experts (some of whom might be within your company), performs independent research, pores over industry journals, and talks with customers.


You can find that level of dedication in a freelancer who specializes in your industry, or you can build a long-term relationship with a strong content generalist who takes the time to develop that depth of knowledge about your individual company.


What you don't want is a pennies-a-word person from one of the cheap freelance sites. They simply can't make the commitment to learning your topic the way a true pro can.


Where do you find these content professionals?


I cheated when I wrote this post - because I went to the guidelines for our Certified Content Marketer application evaluations.


These are the qualities we look for when we're assessing the work of writers seeking our Certification - and these are the qualities you'll find in the writers who earn that badge.


We have a whole page dedicated to them - some serving specific niches like real estate or healthcare, and others who write across several industries.


A member of the Copyblogger editorial team takes a close look at each applicant's writing. (I'm on the evaluation team as well.)


We look for the qualities I talked about above: a great writing voice - first and foremost - paired with strategy, professionalism, and straight-up marketing chops.


If you're looking for a serious content professional, this is where you'll find her or him. But don't wait too long.


The perfect writer for your business would love to get started making your content program more successful … don't let her slip away to some other company.





If you're a writer who wants to become a Certified Content Marketer, our training program opens to new students next week …


But you can get in early if you add your email address below.


The Certified Content Marketer training program helps writers position themselves and their offerings, so that they can build profitable freelance writing businesses.









Find out when our Certified Content Marketer training program reopens:
























Editor's note: The original version of this post was published on November 12, 2014.


The post What to Look for in a Professional Content Writer appeared first on Copyblogger.


Thursday, 28 July 2016

Someone is leaking all the details of the Samsung Note 7 in a Reddit AMA


The Samsung Note 7 is believed to be on its way, and one Redditor with a good track record of Samsung leaks is dumping all the details in an AMA. Samsung's Note 7 is said to have 4GB RAM and 64GB Memory standard, and a “body is similar to the S7 edge” with rounded edges and a nearly edge-to-edge display. Blue with a gold bezel will be the flagship model, while a black unit with a grey or silver bezel will also be available. The gold option is said to be international only. The 12-megapixel camera has a slow motion feature…

This story continues at The Next Web


Google Chrome for iOS Now Supports Accelerated Mobile Pages by @SouthernSEJ

An update this week to the Google Chrome browser for iOS brings support for Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP).

The post Google Chrome for iOS Now Supports Accelerated Mobile Pages by @SouthernSEJ appeared first on Search Engine Journal.

Search Marketing Is The Future, Right? by @annaleacrowe

The future of search has me in a constant spin cycle. Do you feel this way? Bing has 133 million monthly searches. Google hit over 100 billion. That's a lot to take in.

The post Search Marketing Is The Future, Right? by @annaleacrowe appeared first on Search Engine Journal.