Archive for April, 2008

Collaborative Polling

Wednesday, April 30th, 2008

Quibblo.com just came out with a new “Collaborative Polling” feature, whereby flash quizzes that you display on your site will generate trackbacks, and will also display all of the other places where the quiz or poll has been taken. The poll below is one good example.


Quizzes by Quibblo.com

Misspelling Quizes: How easy is it to be #1 in google for something that doesn’t exist

Saturday, April 5th, 2008

There are, generally speaking, two philosophically different kinds of SEO. Honest SEO is a process applied to a site to obtain more organic search traffic from the target audience. Very often, this involves creating content that is tailored to the way that search engine users phrase their search queries. This is just smart, customer-centric marketing. The other kind of SEO — maybe we could call it spam SEO or black hat SEO — seeks to trick search engines into believing a page is about something that it’s not actually about. For example, this post is trying to capture Miley Cyrus related search traffic, while this post is trying to capture traffic where people search for (non-existent) photos or video of Zac Efron nude. These pages provide a poor experience to the users who land on them, because they patently do not offer what the user was looking for. They are just designed to attract traffic where traffic is available.

However, not everything that is a “trick” is a black hat technique, in the sense of deceiving the user. Misspellings are a prime example of that. Suppose someone searches google for “quizes”, when they probably meant “quizzes”. Someone has to rank #1 for “quizes”, and hopefully for the user’s sake it is a page that is all about quizzes. All to often, however, misspelled queries return results from whatever rinky-dink web pages happen to have also misspelled the same word. It provide a service to the user when marketers create targeted content around the misspelling, such as this page about “quizes“. This page offers users a chance to get the quiz content they wanted from a high-quality source. So yes, it’s an SEO trick, but not a dirty one.I actually just created the quizes page. I’m working on creating some more “quize-related” content for it. I’ll update this post with info on the progress of this page in terms of organic search rankings and traffic.

By the way, here’s an example of quizes-related content:

Porn Star, Pony, or Politician?

Friday, April 4th, 2008

Racehorses, politicians, and adult film stars all have funny names. Can you tell who’s who when it comes to running hard, and beating out the competition?

porn star, pony or politician quiz | digg story

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Maybe Your Keywords Do Not Mean What You Think They Mean

Thursday, April 3rd, 2008

Mass media can drive search traffic on the internet like nothing else. And if you’re a performance based search advertiser, you’ve gotta be on the lookout for 800 pound gorillas impinging on your keyword space. Take, for example, this poor fellow, who is just trying to sell jars of gourmet French foods in the UK, and cannot figure out why he gets such huge volumes of search traffic for the keyword ratatouille. Someone had to break it to him that this was not click fraud, but simply the fact that the biggest animated film of the past three years had the same title as his delicious eggplant ragout.  So sad.