Showing posts with label search engines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label search engines. Show all posts

Tuesday, 9 September 2014

7 Ways to Optimize Image Files for SEO

7 Ways to Optimize Image Files for SEO image 7 Ways To Optimize Image Files for SEO Blog 600x450

Have you ever puzzled over what image file types you should be using or if you really need to add file names and alt text to every image on your website for SEO’s sake? Don’t let these nitty-gritty details intimidate you from achieving the next level for your on-page SEO or showing up in image-based search engines like Google Images.


Let’s breakdown the basics on how you can optimize image files to be more SEO-friendly.

1. Use clear and descriptive file names

Aim to make your image file names easy for Google to comprehend. For instance, imagine you’re Google and you come across an image titled: Image01.jpeg. Would you know what that image stands for? It would be much better to name an image file more along the lines of Optimize-Images-SEO-2014.jpeg, especially if the content on the page is also about optimizing images for SEO. Essentially, the more clues that Google can use to figure out what a site is about, the better.

SmartBug tip: Careful not to be spammy by writing excessively long file names or keyword stuffing.

Related Resources from B2C


2. Use keyword-rich alt text

Alt text simply refers to a text alternative for images when a web browser can’t properly render them. How many times have you opened up an email on your desktop or mobile device and the image(s) didn’t load? Did you still decide to click on the image or call-to-action to visit the landing page? As marketers, we want to take advantage of writing a descriptive, keyword-rich alt text to increase the likelihood of click-through-rates even if our images can’t render properly for our users.

Additionally, if you decide to use an image as a link, make sure to include alt text that is relevant to the link’s destination to improve the user experience.

3. Context is key

Wherever possible, make sure that images are placed near the relevant text because you don’t want to confuse search engines. Search engines assess what page the image is on and the content around the image to dissect important information about the subject matter of your image. Basically, don’t feature an image about a cooking recipe if you’re content is about setting business goals. (A little farfetched example but you get the idea).

4. Monitor page load times

Use the “Site Speed” tool in Google Analytics to your advantage. By monitoring page load times, you can compare how each page is performing in comparison to the site average. This may help you uncover that you’re using too many or too large images. A general rule of thumb for page load time is between 3 and 5 seconds.
Remember, it’s all about the user experience and search engines recognize this important element in their ranking algorithm as well. If necessary, you can reduce the number of files that need to load on the page by combining images and code files, as well as removing any unnecessary images.

5. Reduce the files sizes of your images

Here’s are a few simple ways to reduce the files sizes of your images:
  • Crop your images to the correct size of your page width. So if your page is 970 px wide, resize the image to that width.

  • Show a smaller image and provide the option to view a larger image in a pop-up or to be displayed on a separate webpage.

  • Reduce the color depth to the lowest acceptable level.

6. Use commonly supported file types

It’s widely recommended to use JPEG as a first choice, and PNG as a second choice. It’s also a good idea to have the extension of your filename match with the file type (Ex: .jpeg or .png).

7. Supply an image sitemap file

Consider consolidating your images into a single directory rather than having image files spread out in numerous directories and subdirectories across your domain. An image sitemap file title such as smartbugblogposts/images/ would simplify the path to images for search engines. Furthermore, this helps webmasters stay organized behind the scenes.

Now that we have covered the basics of how you can optimize image files for SEO, it’s important to remember that the user experience should always come first. Great image content is an excellent way to build traffic to site, however, users need to be able to find it first! Following the best practices listed above will increase the likelihood that your images will be returned in those relevant search results.

If you haven’t considered optimizing image files for your overall SEO strategy yet, now is a great time to start.

What other best practices for optimizing image files can you think of? Please share below.





Saturday, 2 August 2014

Top 15 Most Popular Search Engines

Here are the top 15 Most Popular Search Engines as derived from our eBizMBA Rank which is a continually updated average of each website's Alexa Global Traffic Rank, and U.S. Traffic Rank from both Compete and Quantcast."*#*" Denotes an estimate for sites with limited data.

Google


1 - eBizMBA Rank | 1,100,000,000 - Estimated Unique Monthly Visitors | 1 - Compete Rank | 1 - Quantcast Rank | 1 - Alexa Rank | August 1, 2014.
The Most Popular Search Engines | eBizMBA


Bing


15 - eBizMBA Rank | 350,000,000 - Estimated Unique Monthly Visitors | 5 - Compete Rank | 19 - Quantcast Rank | 22 - Alexa Rank | August 1, 2014.
The Most Popular Search Engines | eBizMBA



Yahoo!


18 - eBizMBA Rank | 300,000,000 - Estimated Unique Monthly Visitors | *8* - Compete Rank | *28* - Quantcast Rank | NA - Alexa Rank | August 1, 2014.
The Most Popular Search Engines | eBizMBA



Ask


25 - eBizMBA Rank | 245,000,000 - Estimated Unique Monthly Visitors | 14 - Compete Rank | 31 - Quantcast Rank | 31 - Alexa Rank | August 1, 2014.
The Most Popular Search Engines | eBizMBA


Aol Search


245 - eBizMBA Rank | 125,000,000 - Estimated Unique Monthly Visitors | *250* - Compete Rank | *240* - Quantcast Rank | NA - Alexa Rank | August 1, 2014.
The Most Popular Search Engines | eBizMBA


Wow


271 - eBizMBA Rank | 100,000,000 - Estimated Unique Monthly Visitors | 20 - Compete Rank | *26* - Quantcast Rank | 767 - Alexa Rank | August 1, 2014.
The Most Popular Search Engines | eBizMBA


Web Crawler

511 - eBizMBA Rank | 65,000,000 - Estimated Unique Monthly Visitors | 100 - Compete Rank | 759 - Quantcast Rank | 674 - Alexa Rank | August 1, 2014.
The Most Popular Search Engines | eBizMBA


My Web Search

545 - eBizMBA Rank | 60,000,000 - Estimated Unique Monthly Visitors | *105* - Compete Rank | 1,124 - Quantcast Rank | 405 - Alexa Rank | August 1, 2014.
The Most Popular Search Engines | eBizMBA


Infospace

892 - eBizMBA Rank | 24,000,000 - Estimated Unique Monthly Visitors | *66* - Compete Rank | *500* - Quantcast Rank | 2,110 - Alexa Rank | August 1, 2014.
The Most Popular Search Engines | eBizMBA


Info

1,064 - eBizMBA Rank | 13,500,000 - Estimated Unique Monthly Visitors | 378 - Compete Rank | 877 - Quantcast Rank | 1,938 - Alexa Rank | August 1, 2014.
The Most Popular Search Engines | eBizMBA


Duck Duck Go

2,153 - eBizMBA Rank | 13,000,000 - Estimated Unique Monthly Visitors | 2,323 - Compete Rank | 3,479 - Quantcast Rank | 658 - Alexa Rank | August 1, 2014.
The Most Popular Search Engines | eBizMBA


Blekko

2,280 - eBizMBA Rank | 12,500,000 - Estimated Unique Monthly Visitors | 862 - Compete Rank | 1,461 - Quantcast Rank | 4,518 - Alexa Rank | August 1, 2014.
The Most Popular Search Engines | eBizMBA


Contentko

2,402 - eBizMBA Rank | 11,000,000 - Estimated Unique Monthly Visitors | *200* - Compete Rank | *2,500* - Quantcast Rank | 4,505 - Alexa Rank | August 1, 2014.
The Most Popular Search Engines | eBizMBA


Dogpile

2,421 - eBizMBA Rank | 10,500,000 - Estimated Unique Monthly Visitors | 2,734 - Compete Rank | 1,446 - Quantcast Rank | 3,084 - Alexa Rank | August 1, 2014.
The Most Popular Search Engines | eBizMBA


Alhea

4,300 - eBizMBA Rank | 7,500,000 - Estimated Unique Monthly Visitors | 451 - Compete Rank | *1,225* - Quantcast Rank | 11,225 - Alexa Rank | August 1, 2014.
The Most Popular Search Engines | eBizMBA


Source - Most Popular Search Engines








Thursday, 24 July 2014

The 8 Most Important SEO Data Points of Any Website



Data is the currency of online marketers. If you’re an SEO or digital marketer, you know exactly what I mean. You live in a sea of data — numbers, line graphs, bar graphs, pie graphs, venn diagrams, percentages, proportions, analyses, analytics, and every combination of said metrics.

I get that. I’ve helped to found two analytics companies. Sometimes, though, it’s necessary to get the quick-and-dirty on things — the barebones numbers that provide the core information source on a website.

Those are the numbers that I want to explain in this article. When you’re finished reading this article, you’ll know the eight data points that will give you an accurate read on your website. Then, you can take action based on what you know.

What you’re about to discover will enhance your ability as an SEO, a marketer, and a digital expert.

Domain Authority

The Domain Authority of a website is a number developed by Moz that functions as a comparative metric for how important and powerful your website is.

Domain Authority is Moz’s calculated metric for how well a given domain is likely to rank in Google’s search results. It is based off data from the Mozscape web index and includes link counts, MozRank, and MozTrust scores, and dozens of other factors. It uses a machine learning model to predictively find an algorithm that best correlates with rankings across thousands of search results that we predict against.
Domain Authority is measured on a 100-point scale. If your site is in the 20s, it’s not so hot. If your site is in the 90s, you’re doing really well.

Why It Matters

The Domain Authority metric has proved to be one of the most reliable numbers for determining the success of a website in the SERPs. A higher DA invariably translates into bigger traffic and better search ranking.

I’ve developed a chart to help you understand your DA. Find out your domain authority (“Where to Find It” below), and then find out how you’re doing.

Thankfully, you can improve your Domain Authority through careful and persistent work.

Where to Find It

Domain Authority is publicly available for any website. You can use the following free sources

Site Speed (Load Time)

A website’s speed is basically how fast it appears in a user’s browser.
Technically, site speed is dependent upon load time. Load time calculates the latency from the point at which a user submits a request. The network server time and browser time are both factored into the equation, along with the page size (measured in bytes), and requests.

Though there are a variety of technical factors to load time, the most important issue to take notice of is the number of seconds/milliseconds it takes for your page to appear.

Why It Matters

Site speed is crucial for two related reasons — 1) SEO and 2) user experience. From an SEO standpoint, it’s apparent that Google devalues sites with long load times. This may be tied to the user experience issue. Pages that take a long time to load have higher bounce rates and lower levels of engagement.

You know this experientially. If a page takes a long time to load, you probably become impatient. You may click off to a new tab to pass the time while the slow-loading page comes into view. Or, you may just forget about it altogether.

Where to Find It

There are a variety of helpful places you can get site speed metrics. Here are the top three free places:

Quicksprout – (full disclosure, this my company) My analysis tool gives you both a basic speed score, and a full report. The “speed score” is a handy number for determining how you rank, along with load time (in seconds), page size, and requests.

0618 NeilPatel01 The 8 Most Important SEO Data Points of Any Website

A more advanced report (also free) provides a full graphical readout of speed metrics based on content analysis, page type/file/size/load time, scoring performance, along with a series of recommendations.


Google’s pagespeed tool is another handy and freely available source of speed insights.

Their analysis provides desktop and mobile displays for your site, along with scores, images, and recommendations.

0618 NeilPatel02 The 8 Most Important SEO Data Points of Any Website


A quick and easy analysis of site speed is provided by Pingdom Tools. The Pingdom readout displays the performance score, and load time in milliseconds.

0618 NeilPatel03 The 8 Most Important SEO Data Points of Any Website

Backlinks

A backlink is any link to your site from an external site. There are entire companies devoted to analyzing this set of data alone. There are an infinite number of ways you can slice, dice, analyze, parse, interpret, and view this data, but the simple metric that I want to point out is the number of backlinks.

Why It Matters

It’s an undisputed fact in the SEO world that backlinks are the most crucial component of a website’s health and wellbeing. Without strong backlinks, you have no search engine optimization, no authority, no traffic, and very little in the way of digital marketing success.

It is still extremely important that your site have a variety of strong backlinks to show the search engines that your site is valuable, useful, and worthy of high rankings.

Backlinks, or more comprehensively, a site’s link profile as a whole, is the most important factor Google considers when it analyzes a site for ranking.

It’s dangerous to rely on the number of backlinks alone as a determinative metric for taking action. A site could have billions of backlinks, but a huge percentage of these may be spammy, thus compromising the link profile. Another website may have just a small handful of backlinks, but they are all high-authority, reputable, niche sites that lend value. Although this is one of the most important numbers to consider for SEO, it should be considered in conjunction with other factors.

Where to Find It

Quicksprout – Get a quick score of your total backlinks using my analysis tool. There’s no distracting data here — just a simple number and rating (“high,” “medium,” “low,”).

0618 NeilPatel04 The 8 Most Important SEO Data Points of Any Website

Open Site Explorer – For a comprehensive yet free analysis of your site’s link profile, you can use Open Site Explorer. They provide some parsing of the data.

0618 NeilPatel05 The 8 Most Important SEO Data Points of Any Website

Google Webmaster Tools – GWT allows you to download a selection of links and view the top linking domains, latest links, and sample links.

Number of Indexed Pages

The number of indexed pages is a count of how many pages the searches engines have crawled, and are thus returning in search queries.

Why It Matters


Indexed pages is basically a count of your website’s content. The more blog articles you write, for example, the more indexed pages you have. Besides, the more pages you have, the more opportunity you have to rank for given keywords. In addition, you can strengthen your own internal link profile with more indexed and interlinked pages.