25 Google Penguin Update Recovery Tips

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If Your Website Was Hit By Google Penguin, Then These Tips Can Help Your Recovery

Google Penguin Update
Following Google’s Penguin update to its search engine algorithm in May 2012, many websites were hit with their search engine rankings being reduced. I came across this great article by Suniel Kumar, who talks more about how to recovery from the Google Penguin update by offering 25 tips.

In brief, the 25 tips are as follows:

1. Spammy Links

2. Over Optimized Anchor Texts

3. Inbound Links

4. Footer Links

5. Redirects

6. Broken Links

7. Content Spamming

8. Doorway Pages

9. Technical SEO

10. Pagerank Sculpting

11. Over Optimization

12. Quick & Easy Link

13. Move to a New Domain

14. Website Audit

15. Selling Links

16. Make User-friendly Content

17. Article Spinning

18. Dead Links

19. Reconsideration Reques

20. Canonical URLs

21. Duplicate Title

22. Build Natural Links

23. Schema

24. Link Warnings

25. Negative SEO

The full article can be found here.

Recommendations for building smartphone-optimized websites

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Does Your Business Have A Website That Is Optimised For mobile Phones?

If the answer to the above question is NO, then you NEED to read the following article by Pierre Far, Google’s Webmaster Trends Analyst.

More and more people are using their smartphones, whether it be an Apple OS, Android or Windows phone, to search for products or services online. This becomes even more important if you have a local brick-and-mortar business or you offer a local service, such as a plumber etc.

Webmaster level: All

Every day more and more smartphones get activated and more websites are producing smartphone-optimized content. Since we last talked about how to build mobile-friendly websites, we’ve been working hard on improving Google’s support for smartphone-optimized content. As part of this effort, we launched Googlebot-Mobile for smartphones back in December 2011, which is specifically tasked with identifying such content.

Today we’d like to give you Google’s recommendations for building smartphone-optimized websites and explain how to do so in a way that gives both your desktop- and smartphone-optimized sites the best chance of performing well in Google’s search results.

Recommendations for smartphone-optimized sites

The full details of our recommendation can be found in our new help site, which we now summarize.

When building a website that targets smartphones, Google supports three different configurations:

  1. Sites that use responsive web design, i.e. sites that serve all devices on the same set of URLs, with each URL serving the same HTML to all devices and using just CSS to change how the page is rendered on the device. This is Google’s recommended configuration.
  2. Sites that dynamically serve all devices on the same set of URLs, but each URL serves different HTML (and CSS) depending on whether the user agent is a desktop or a mobile device.
  3. Sites that have a separate mobile and desktop sites.

Responsive web design

Responsive web design is a technique to build web pages that alter how they look using CSS3 media queries. That is, there is one HTML code for the page regardless of the device accessing it, but its presentation changes using CSS media queries to specify which CSS rules apply for the browser displaying the page. You can learn more about responsive web design from this blog post by Google’s webmasters and in our recommendations.

Using responsive web design has multiple advantages, including:

  • It keeps your desktop and mobile content on a single URL, which is easier for your users to interact with, share, and link to and for Google’s algorithms to assign the indexing properties to your content.
  • Google can discover your content more efficiently as we wouldn’t need to crawl a page with the different Googlebot user agents to retrieve and index all the content.

Device-specific HTML

However, we appreciate that for many situations it may not be possible or appropriate to use responsive web design. That’s why we support having websites serve equivalent content using different, device-specific, HTML. The device-specific HTML can be served on the same URL (a configuration called dynamic serving) or different URLs (such as www.example.com and m.example.com).

If your website uses a dynamic serving configuration, we strongly recommend using the Vary HTTP header to communicate to caching servers and our algorithms that the content may change for different user agents requesting the page. We also use this as a crawling signal for Googlebot-Mobile. More details are here.

As for the separate mobile site configuration, since there are many ways to do this, our recommendation introduces annotations that communicate to our algorithms that your desktop and mobile pages are equivalent in purpose; that is, the new annotations describe the relationship between the desktop and mobile content as alternatives of each other and should be treated as a single entity with each alternative targeting a specific class of device.

These annotations will help us discover your smartphone-optimized content and help our algorithms understand the structure of your content, giving it the best chance of performing well in our search results.

Conclusion

This blog post is only a brief summary of our recommendation for building smartphone-optimized websites. Please read the full recommendation and see which supported implementation is most suitable for your site and users. And, as always, please ask on our Webmaster Help forums if you have more questions.


Google Webmaster Central Blog

Less Than Half Independent Restaurants Have A Website

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Are You One Of These Restaurants Without A Website?

Restaurant SEOIn the time of the Internet, Social Media and mobile phones, how many businesses, whether off-line or online have a website? Probably most of them, is that fair to say?

So, having a website is fairly important now days, but after reading an article on SmartBlogs Food & Beverage I was staggered to learn that less than half independent restaurants have a website or are using the internet to market their business! I know this article is about the US market, but usually the UK is similar.

Can you imagine a business without a website! And even more staggering without a mobile friendly website!

In a recent study by Restaurant Sciences of Internet use in the restaurant industry, they discovered that:

  • although almost all chain restaurants have websites
  • less than 50% of independent restaurants do
  • independent restaurants that did have websites, only 40% display their menu.

Other revelations are that:

  • many independent restaurants without a website have set up a Facebook page. However, search engines such as Google and Bing, find it difficult to use information from Facebook to include in their search engines.
  • Over Valentines’ Day, Google reported that 64% of consumers searched for restaurants from their mobile phones. Without a website, how will your restaurant show up in a mobile search?
  • What works on a desktop computer may not work well for mobile users on the go
  •  Most restaurants are not taking advantage of, or even claiming as their own, the Google Places (now Google+ Local) or Bing listings that these search engines automatically create for restaurants

If you are a restaurant owner and would like people to find your restaurant in the search engines, then call us NOW on 01689 602 248 or email us