Andi Smith on October 9th, 2008

Yahoo! have relaunched recent acquisition IndexTools as Yahoo! Web Analytics. Currently in a private beta, Yahoo! Web Analytics tools look set to give Google a run for it’s money with real time updates, raw data formats and eventually with the release of Yahoo! Open Strategy an API that will allow developers to access data.

Yahoo! Web Analytics is an enterprise site analytics tool that provides real-time insight into visitor behavior on your website. With powerful and flexible tools and dashboards, Yahoo! Web Analytics helps online marketers and website designers enhance the visitor experience, increase sales and reduce marketing costs.

It will be interesting to see what Google do next to respond and stop customers leaving their services.

Continue reading about Yahoo! Web Analytics

Andi Smith on October 7th, 2008

At the moment, the Internet seems to be going crazy for Search Engine Optimisation (known as SEO).

SEO is the current buzz acronym, like XML was way back in 2003. My clients want it, my friends want it. I want it. And the best part SEO doesn’t cost a lot to do. It just requires some time investment, once every month or so to keep you at the top of the rankings.

Not everyone can be number one on every search on Google, and anyone who promises that they can make you number 1 within X days is lieing. Google’s search algorithms change frequently, possibly every day, and nobody knows exactly how Google works. But, looking at current top ranking search results, we can get a rough idea.

Before we start, let’s get one thing clear: no one SEO technique can give you the ultimate rankings boost. You need to play with many, and every so often add some new ones, remove some old ones. Keeping your site, and especially your SEO techniques fresh is often half the battle.

A URL counts for a lot

A URL with your desired keyword in counts for a lot when Google is indexing pages. You can add all the other SEO techniques that have ever existed in the World to your website, but if your Britney Spears fansite is hosted at http://www.geocities.com/spacemountain/mysite/90881.html chances are it’s never going to rank higher than www.britneyspears.com, and one could argue that it never should. Google is designed in such a way that official websites should be among the highest ranking. If, however, you happen to be Britney Spears and you have your website on Geocities, then you have a problem. So for professionals, sometimes paying a premium for your official domain is more than worth it. Of course, if this is just a personal blog, it’s probably cheaper just to think of a new name for the blog.

The title of your page

And by title, we’re referring to the title that appears in the Windows title bar and is within the <title> tags on your page. As someone creating a web page you may often discard the title that appears in the browser bar - after all it’s so disconnected from the rest of your content - but Google doesn’t. Currently, the data contained within title is very important on Google rankings.

Gamespot aim to be one of the top search results for computer and video games in a Google search, and one of the ways they acheive this goal is by repeating key words in the title. For example, at the time of writing the title for the Gears of War 2 page on Gamespot reads: “Gears of War 2 for Xbox 360 - Gears of War 2 Xbox360 Game - Gears of War 2 Xbox 360 Video Game”. Notice the change in spelling for Xbox360 in the second repetition, and also notice how the phrase is different each time to suggest that the site is not just repeating key words.

IGN, another games website, take a slightly different approach to their title tags focussing on the additional search parameters that would be linked with the game. At the time of writing, the Gears of War 2 page reads “IGN: Gears of War 2 News, Previews, Features and More Articles”. This method gives IGN a better chance of being one of the top hits should someone type “Gears of War 2 preview” into Google. Once the game is released IGN’s title bar will update to include reviews, cheats and walkthroughs.

The language of your page

It sounds silly, but setting the language of your page can actually help increase your rankings in the countries specific to your target audience, and it doesn’t seem to affect your overall ranking. Add the following attributes to your HTML tag (adjusting the language to the actual language of the page):

xml:lang="en-GB" lang="en-GB"

If you have multiple language versions of your site, offer a <link> tag in your <head> section to the other language, and the search engine will index the correct page for the correct audience accordingly. For example:

<LINK rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="frenchversion.html" hreflang="fr" lang="fr" title="Mon blog">

The META tags

There’s two META tags which search engines pay attention to when ranking your site, keywords and description. These two tags seem to once again be in favour at Google, although only a few years ago it was rumoured that Google didn’t take them into account at all.

For META keywords, add the following tag to the <head> section of your page:

<meta name="keywords" content="comma, seperated, keywords" />

As a comma seperated list, your keywords should be consistent with your website’s content, and what is written in your title bar. It is often a good idea to start with the website name, before adding 4 or 5 keywords which describe a common theme on your site, and then a few more keywords describing the page itself. Try not to go overboard with keywords. Too many, and search engines may just ignore the lot.

For META description, add the following tag to the <head> section of your page:

<meta name="description" content="This should be a description" />

A successful high ranking on Google via META description seems to be based on two things.

  1. Your description should basically contain the site name, and then a paragraph which summarises the title of the page, and the keywords. For example, if my site were called ‘Hollywood Stars’ and I had a page about ‘Bruce Willis’ with the keywords ‘news, movies, action, Die Hard, 16 Blocks”; my description would probably read: “Bruce Willis on Hollyword Stars. The number one resource for news, gossip and photos on Bruce Willis, star of action movie Die Hard and 16 Blocks.”
  2. Your description should change frequently. Google seems to like websites where the description changes once a month, so try and change the descriptions around a bit every so often.

And so concludes part 1 of our Search Engine Optimisation guide. Be sure to check back for part 2 soon!

Continue reading about Search Engine Optimisation - Part 1

Andi Smith on February 27th, 2008

Ever wondered how you could speed up your web pages? Perhaps you feel you’ve tried everything but you just can’t nail down what is taking the time to load? Enter Yahoo’s YSlow, which is actually a plugin to another Firefox plugin - Firebug. YSlow analyzes web pages and tells you why they’re slow based on certain rules. For each rule your website will be given a grade along with an explanation of why your website received that grade so that you can focus on key areas to speed up your content. A detailed description of the rules can be found here.

YSlow

In the coming weeks, I’ll be looking into some of the techniques that can be used to speed up your website, but in the meantime, find out more information about YSlow here!

Continue reading about YSlow

Andi Smith on February 4th, 2008

As you have probably heard, on Friday Microsoft placed a bid to takeover Yahoo! for $44.6 billion.

Yahoo! is the second most popular Internet search engine after Google - but there are some considerable differences in search hits between the two. Yahoo! has been struggling for some time, with falling advertising revenues and dwindling share prices, and the dominance of Google as the search engine of choice for many which has really put a strain on Yahoo!’s operations.

Yahoo! For Sale

Microsoft claim that Google are dominating the market and a takeover of Yahoo! would encourage healthier competition. “Today this market is increasingly dominated by one player. Together, Microsoft and Yahoo! can offer a competitive choice while better fulfilling the needs of customers and partners,” said the press statement from Microsoft.

Google, on the other hand, have expressed their concern about such a takeover bid. “Could Microsoft now attempt to exert the same sort of inappropriate and illegal influence over the Internet that it did with the PC? While the Internet rewards competitive innovation, Microsoft has frequently sought to establish proprietary monopolies — and then leverage its dominance into new, adjacent markets” says David Drummond, Senior Vice President, on their blog.
Microsoft’s plan could potentially backfire as Yahoo! now begin to quickly seek out other ways to stay independent and could potentially push it closer towards rival Google.

One thing’s for sure - the future of Yahoo! is about to take a turn in some kind of new direction. I personally just hope it’s neither Microsoft or Google that end up holding the reigns.

Continue reading about Who Will Buy Yahoo!?!