Tuesday, January 22, 2013



Google has announced a new Panda refresh, making this version number 24. This refresh has a noticeable impact 1.2% of English based queries according to Google.

I was noticing impact in Google ranking (Drop and Increase) of many Popular websites and things look pretty confirmed with many webmasters, business owners and SEO agencies have witnessed major drops and upward trends in rankings since January 17, 2013 this month and expected for another Panda/Penguin update from Google. And Here It Is !!!! Google might eventually make it a regular practice similar to crawling where back links are evaluated on run time and contribute to the websites performance more swiftly.

However Google call it small impact of just 1.2%, we all know how much that matters to any business.

Tuesday, January 15, 2013



Facebook challenging Google, Yelp, Foursquare and others with both hands by introducing its ‘Graph Search’ -  ‘Mission is to make the world more open and connected’ , ‘the tools to map out their relationships with the people and things they care about’.

Graph Search will appear as a bigger search bar at the top of each page. Graph Search and web search are different from each other. As web search is designed to take a set of keywords and provide the best possible results that match with those keywords. But with Facebook Graph Search you combine phrases to get that set of people, places, photos or other content that's been shared on Facebook. 

Graph Search is a new way for you to find people, photos, places and interests that are most relevant to you on Facebook. Graph Search will help you instantly find others, learn more about them and make connections, explore photos, quickly find places like local attractions and restaurants, and learn about common interests like music, movies, books and more. With Graph Search, you can search for people, photos, places and interests. To do the search in Facebook Graph Search engine, type your search into the blue bar at the top of the page. As you start to type, suggestions appear in a drop down. You can refine your search using the tools on the right-hand side of the page.

Facebook isn’t launching a traditional search engine like Google or Bing is — this is a social search engine, and possibly the one most likely to succeed due to Facebook’s billion-plus user base and the vast amounts of data that users put into Facebook.

Monday, December 10, 2012



Google and Bing both punch all time highs in United States search market distribute in October, while overall desktop search activity was up 8% from the month before according to comScore’s October 2012 search activity/rankings report.

Google’s market share rose two-tenths of a point, from 66.7% in September to 66.9%  in October. Bing gained a tenth of a point and reached 16% in October. Both of those numbers represent all-time highs using comScore’s estimates. While Yahoo was static for the month

Monday, December 3, 2012

Google today announced that it will source the data from sources like the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, the US Food & Drug Administration, the Dept. of Veterans Affairs and others.
Google has created a number of health-related search features over the years, including a health OneBox that’s been around since August 2009. It shows up on a variety of medical-related searches, from conditions to symptoms to, yes, medications.

Google also contributed that the new Knowledge Graph display for medications is replacing the previous medication OneBox display, and this is still rolling out so all users may not see it quite yet.



http://ask4seo.blogspot.in/

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Google launched the news keywords tag in September, designed as a way for news publishers to work around the fact that often the key terms they want their stories to be found for don’t make it into the story headlines.
The primary reason for this are two-fold. First, it can sometimes be awkward or make a headline lengthy to ensure the most relevant terms someone might search for appear within a headline.
Second, there are plenty of journalists who simply can’t get idea that they are writing for digital, where descriptive headlines are crucial, and instead want to stick with headlines that make more sense when seen in the overall context of a printed page.


Bing's New Webmaster Guidelines

Bing has published its first set of webmaster guidelines, offering website owners general guidance on best practices related to SEO for Bing’s search engine.

> Content - Content is what Bing is seeks

> Links - Bing wants to see links grow organically, and abuses to this such as buying links or participating in link schemes (link farms, etc.) lead to the value of such links being deprecated.

>Social -   If you are influential socially, this leads to your followers sharing your information widely, which in turn results in Bing seeing these positive signals.  These positive signals can have an impact on how you rank organically in the long run.


> Indexation - The main pathways to being indexed are:
  • Links to your content help Bing find it, which can lead us to index your content
  • Use of features within Bing Webmaster Tools such as Submit URL and Sitemap Upload are also ways to ensure we are aware of your content
> Technical - Here it checks Site's page load time, robots.txt, redirects, canonical tags

> SEO 
  • title tags – keep these clear and relevant
  • meta description tags – keep these clear and relevant, though use the added space to expand on the tag in a meaningful way</li> <li><b><alt></b> tags – use the field to describe an image so we can understand the content of the image</li> <li><b><h1> </b> tag – helps users understand the content of a page more clearly when properly used</li> <li><b>Internal links </b>– helps create a view of how content inside your website is related.  Also helps users navigate easily to related content.</li> <li><b>Links to external sources </b>– be careful who you link to as it’s a signal you trust them.  The number of links pointing from your page to external locations should be reasonable.</li> <li><b>Social sharing </b>– enabling social sharing encourages visitors to share your content with their networks</li> <li><b>Crawlability      Ref- http://www.bing.com/webmaster/help/webmaster-guidelines-30fba23a<br></b></li> </ul> </div>

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

A security bug in Google Webmaster Tools has given users access to old accounts and websites that they’re no longer supposed to be able to access.



Webmaster Tools accounts is that users are finding themselves with sudden access to accounts that they once had access to, but no longer do; i.e., former clients, employers and the like. That bug is presumably giving a lot of power to individuals that shouldn’t have it — power to deindex, disavow links, unverify the current/legitimate webmaster’s access, and even redirect sites to other verified domains in the user’s account. It also reveals a lot of link, search, index/crawl and other data to users that shouldn’t be able to see those things.
 


This is a serious problem and Google’s silence on it so far suggests that they’re still trying to sort out what’s happening and why — and how to fix it.

Google fixed this issue and according to them, Google Analytics was not impacted.

Friday, August 10, 2012

Want to rank better in Google? If you’re an individual, you could build your own site and hope it does well. But you might have more success by creating a page for yourself on a social media site like LinkedIn, Facebook or Twitter.

Ranking On Google: The Social Media way

> Create your business profile on social media websites like linked in, twitter etc. and promote this page.

> Create your business page on Facebook, Google+ etc and contribute here daily with latest updates

> Create profile and participate in other sites like SEOmoz and participate in posts related to your business.

> Create your profile in naymz to check your Online Reputation in search engines and social media websites



Wednesday, August 8, 2012

The following are some tips for decreasing your web page loading times.
1. Check the Current Speed of the Website

The first thing you will want to do is to analyze your current page speed. This allows you to track your improvement and ensure that any changes you make positively improves your page load times.

There are many free tools out there for checking how long it takes to load your website. Here are a few of them:

    Pingdom offers an easy-to-use site speed test that mimics that way a page is loaded in a web browser.
    Page Speed is an open source Firefox add-on that helps you assess the performance of your web pages. It also provides suggestions on how to fix performance issues.
    Web Page Test is another great tool that shows you the speed and performance of your website in different browsers.

2. Optimize Your Images

Know when to use the appropriate file format for your images. Changing to a different file format can dramatically decrease the file size of an image.

    GIF is ideal for images with few colors like logos.
    JPEG is great for images with lots of colors and details like photographs.
    PNG is the choice when you need high quality transparent images.

Check out these resources to learn more about optimizing images:

    The Comprehensive Guide to Saving Images for the Web
    JPEG 101: A Crash Course Guide on JPEG
    Web Designer’s Guide to PNG Image Format
    8 Excellent Tools for Optimizing Your Images

3. Don’t Scale Down Images

Avoid using a larger image than you need just because you can set the width and height attributes of elements in HTML.

If you need a 100x100px image and you have a 700x700px image, use an image editor like Photoshop or one of these web-based image editors to resize the image to the needed dimensions. This lowers the file size of the image, thus helping to decrease page loading times.
4. Compress and Optimize Your Content

The task of compressing your website content can have a huge impact on reducing load times. When using HTTP compression, all of your web page data is sent in a single smaller file instead of a request that is full of many different files. For more information, see this Wikipedia article on HTTP Compression.

You can also optimize and compress your JavaScript and CSS files by combining them and minifying the source code.
5. Put Stylesheet References at the Top

Moving your stylesheet references to the of your HTML document helps your pages feel like it is loading faster because doing so allows your pages to render the styles progressively. In addition, it doesn’t hurt that it’s the W3C standard.
6. Put Script References at the Bottom

Browsers can only download two components per hostname at the same time. If you add your scripts towards the top, it would block anything else below it on the initial loading of the page. This makes it feel like the page is loading slower.

To avoid this situation, place script references as far down the HTML document as possible, preferably right before the closing tag.
7. Place JavaScript and CSS in External Files

If your JavaScript and CSS are directly in your HTML document, they are downloaded every time an HTML document is requested. This, then, doesn’t take advantage of browser caching and increases the size of the HTML document.

Always place your CSS and JavaScript in external files; it’s a best practice and makes your site easier to maintain and update.
8. Minimize HTTP Requests

When visiting a new web page, most of the page-loading time is spent downloading components of that page (e.g. images, stylesheets, and scripts).

By minimizing the number of requests a web page needs to make, it will load faster. To reduce HTTP requests for images, one thing you can do is to use CSS sprites to combine multiple images.

If you have multiple stylesheets and JavaScript libraries, consider combining them to reduce the number of HTTP requests.
9. Cache Your Web Pages

If you use a content management system that dynamically generates your web pages, you should statically cache your web pages and database queries so that you can decrease the strain on your server as well as speed up page rendering times.

When you cache your page, it saves a static version of it to be presented to the user instead of recreating it every time it’s requested.

For WordPress, check out WP Super Cache and W3 Total Cache (also read this WordPress codex entry on optimizing/caching WordPress). Drupal core has native caching.
10. Reduce 301 Redirects
Every time a 301 redirect is used, it forces the browser to a new URL which increases page-loading times. If possible, avoid using 301 redirects.