Forbes Rings In: SEO Do’s and Don’ts for Forum Owners

Last Monday Forbes ran this great article online and we thought we would share the link, along with this brief quote. The article is primarily aimed at forum owners, but blog owners, webmasters and small business owners with a web presence will benefit from the read…

The Internet is awash in bad advice on how to boost search engine results. Likewise, shady services peddle for-pay backlinks, lame for-pay directory listings, and other junk aimed at separating forum owners from their money. Unfortunately, Matt Cutts and his merry band at Google have more aggressively tried to punish practitioners of the darker side of Search Engine Optimization of late.

Google Hummingbird Algorithm, What it Means for Internet Marketing in Portland, Oregon

google hummingbird portland oregon seo internet digital marketingFirst of all, nervous Portland SEOs and business owners: Hummingbird is not a new algorithm update like Panda or Penguin, it’s a new algorithm. The good news for SEO in Portland and for webmasters and internet and digital marketers who fear being struck down by any major changes that Google makes to its algorithm is that it is OLD NEWS. Yep, that’s right, Hummingbird quietly launched a few months ago, according to Google. So, if you weren’t hit by it, you probably don’t need to worry much about it. Don’t just trust us, check out this article from Forbes.

Google announced the algorithm update at a press event last week. The press corp learned that Hummingbird was described as the biggest Google algorithm change since Caffeine, and that it is designed to let Google quickly parse entire questions and complex queries and return relevant answers, as opposed to looking at queries on a keyword-by-keyword basis.

Hummingbird is designed to help Google understand your webpages the way it understands the data in its Knowledge Graph. Google calls the algorithm “Hummingbird” because it’s “precise and fast”. It hasn’t been since 2001 that the algorithm was “so dramatically rewritten” (Sullivan’s words).

Hummingbird should better focus on the meaning behind the words. And it may better understand the actual location of your home, if you’ve shared that with Google. It might understand that ‘place’ means you want a brick-and-mortar store. It might get that ‘iPhone 5s’ is a particular type of electronic device carried by certain stores. Knowing all these meanings may help Google go beyond just finding pages with matching words.

Google said that Hummingbird is paying more attention to each word in a query, ensuring that the whole query — the whole sentence or conversation or meaning — is taken into account, rather than particular words.

The goal is that pages matching the meaning do better, rather than pages matching just a few words. Hummingbird is designed to apply the meaning technology to billions of pages from across the web, in addition to Knowledge Graph facts, which may bring back better results.

So, Hummingbird is really just an extension of Google’s ongoing strategy to become less dependent on keywords, which does have implications for SEO, and while webmasters may not have to worry about a major drop-off in rankings like with updates like Panda or Penguin, this could be more of an ongoing struggle for those competing to get on search results pages.

Keywords are becoming less and less important to search engine ranking success as Google gets smarter at figuring out what things mean, both on the query side of things and on the webpage side of things. The algorithm still consists of over 200 different signals that webmasters can potentially take advantage of to gain a competitive edge.

It’s probably going to be more important than ever to give Google as much information about your site as possible, so that it “understands” it. I would imagine that Google will continue to give webmasters new tools to help with this over time. For now, according to Google (per Sullivan’s report), you don’t need to worry about anything, and Google’s normal SEO guidance remains the same for Portland, Oregon Digital and Internet Marketing and SEO companies.

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SEO in Portland | Google Adds ‘Nearby’ to Narrow Local Results

Businesses looking to focus their SEO in Portland to a more localized market have been given a new tool. Google has added ‘nearby’ to search by location to its list of options.

This is the first time Google is actually letting users dictate when they want it to be used to retrieve results for local queries. Giving users this little bit of control will give users another way to refine their results to match their preferences. It is a win-win for local companies and the searchers that are trying to find them.

The coming months will show how businesses implement this new tool in SEO in Portland, and we can’t wait to see what you come up with!