It’s fair to say that most of us are running Google Analytics on at least a few of the sites we deal with. Market share for Google’s traffic tracking platform was estimated last year around 75-80% in a few separate studies – here’s one from Ghostery . Let’s not get into the whole “Google knows too much” thing. The truth is, the platform is a pretty solid and user-friendly. (Even if it is the lure of an evil empire.) But from an SEO standpoint Google ANalytics definitely leaves some things to be desired. Luckily there are plenty of clever SEOs out there who take on complicated and difficult projects that make our lives easier. Here are five such supergeek gifts that hack Google Analytics into a killer SEO tool: 1. Ranking Tracking with Google
Tag Archives: ajax
SEO for AJAX
AJAX and SEO is a tricky topic – after all, an AJAX-based website is more or less the same as a FLASH website: it may look fancy but is non-navigatable. AJAX got its bad SEO reputation for a number of reasons, including: - crawling issues (you are risking not getting all of your content crawled) – indexing issues (you are risking not getting all of your content indexed) – broken website navigation and useless address bar (because all pages load under the same URL) – useless back/next/reload buttons – potential cloaking issues – which may be unintentional – where the user sees different content than the crawler Here’s the difference in what the crawler can see without AJAX and can’t see with AJAX*: *KUDO’s to Google for the image: http://docs.google.com/present/view?id=dc75gmks_120cjkt2chf Yet AJAX can and should be search engine friendly and following these simple best practices will get you there (or at least much closer to where you should be): 1) Decide where your website ends and your application starts: it does not make sense to make spiders crawl your drafts, but the documents made public and archived instead 2) Make sure you have a URL for each “page” you want to get crawled and indexed 3) Load the basic content containing the keywords at the beginning in a non-dynamic way 4) Cache dynamic pages and serve them as static ones, you could even take snapshots of “pages” which content changes all the time and publish the snapshots 5) Menu items, links and other crucial structural aspects of a site should work without AJAX and/or JavaScript 6) Do not use AJAX for effects but for extra functionality that truly enhances the user experience Some additional tips: AJAX should be used for what it’s designed for – dynamic interaction of the current page with the server (for instance, if you need to submit a form, upload a picture without reloading page, or updating a widget (i.e. calendar)). Most people trigger their basic AJAX through “onClick” events on a given element. In this case the spider will not floor to the AJAX generated content. Another way to do it is using a regular anchor tag (

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SEO for AJAX
Weekly Search & Social News: 03/16/2010
Welcome to another edition of ‘ 7 Days of Search and Social ‘ – last week was a pretty damned busy one out in the search news/blogging space and we have a TON of good reading this week. From compliant code for SEO to the ever popular (debated) SEO standards and a whack of search geeky goodiness, there was plenty out there. Oh and what’s with Matt lately? There have been some funny ones over there (Video section) the last two weeks. Thanks for the giggle bro. I hope this editon finds you well… there’s def something for everyone. And away we go… Lead