Examples of SEO Misinformation
Matt Cutts explains some examples about SEO Misinformation that have been given by reputable people.
Matt Cutts explains some examples about SEO Misinformation that have been given by reputable people.
If you are wondering what to do with regards to SEO and moving your website forward we recommend watching this video.
This is video is titled “SEO Site Advice from the Experts” and is provided by Matt Cutts, Tiffany Lane, Greg Grothaus and Venessa Fox (former Google employer) and this video was produced in May 2010.
They compare over a 1 hour websites and this explains many thing including why Google do not trust meta keyword tags.
Matt starts buy going over a website with no text and explains how websites need text as text is what Google uses for keywords.
Matts simple advice was “Put Text On Your Page”.
He explains you can use the Adwords Keyword Tool to find what keywords people are using to find things.
He explains how text needs to be added and explains how using comments is a way to get content added without your doing it.
Matt explains about having one site and put a lot of work into this rather than building lots of sites.
He covers many things that are important for everyone who uses Google.
If you have been told you have a canonicalisation problem with your website you will be asking yourself why no one else has told you this and is this really important?
Everyone spreading the word about your website will use different variations and as the Google spider goes around the Internet finding all the these links it will be collecting data and storing it into its database. But what is the chosen URL for the website so that Google can collect all this data for one website and add all the value being added to the website all in one place instead of various places.
If you are now confused we will explain, a website without a canonicalisation fix will have 4 landing pages as below:-
Now what we need is to funnel all this into one place. Also technically the web server setup may return different content for the URLs depending on the configuration.
Imagine that Google collects the data for the website as follows:-
If you configure the canonicalisation and then you will have all the value to one place. So the example above would be a total of 3360 inbound links to www.chameleonwebservices.co.uk if this is the chosen domain for Google to use.
We hope all this makes sense so far. If it does you will be wanting to do this change now so how do you do it?
If you have Apache web hosting you can setup a .htacess file as below:-
RewriteEngine On RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^chameleonwebservices.co.uk RewriteRule (.*) http://www.chameleonwebservices.co.uk/$1 [R=301,L]
RewriteEngine on RewriteCond %{THE_REQUEST} ^[A-Z]{3,9} /index.html HTTP/ RewriteRule ^index.html$ http://www.chameleonwebservices.co.uk/ [R=301,L]
If you want to understand about some SEO myths then the best person to learn from is Matt Cutts. Matt is Head of Google’s Webspam Team and in this video he explains about some SEO myths.
If you listen to what Matt has said here you can learn about optimising and SEO.
This page was Google Webmaster Help – Some SEO myths
If you want to understand whether SEO will still exist in five years then the best person to learn from is Matt Cutts. Matt is Head of Google’s Webspam Team and in this video he explains why you SEO is important for your website.
If you listen to what Matt has said here you can help to optimise your website yourself.
This page was Google Webmaster Help – Will SEO still exist in five years