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Rescooped by Gerrit Bes from SEO and Social Media Marketing
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Social Media vs. SEO: Which is Better?

Social Media vs. SEO: Which is Better? | Latest Social Media News | Scoop.it

Social media vs. SEO, which one do you think is better?

 

The answer, of course, is: Both!

 

Let’s look at a few aspects of social media and SEO and how they work together and, unfortunately, sometimes against each other:

http://www.business2community.com/seo/social-media-vs-seo-which-is-better-01280575


Via Rankings.io, Antonino Militello
Rankings.io's curator insight, July 28, 2015 11:42 AM

It’s important to ask: With limited resources, what’s more important—SEO or social mediaThe answer, of course, is: Both!

Marco Favero's curator insight, July 29, 2015 4:29 AM

aggiungere la vostra comprensione ...

Rescooped by Gerrit Bes from Internet Marketing Strategy 2.0
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Now You Are in Trouble: Google Blocks All Referrers Data Also in Google WebMaster Tools

Now You Are in Trouble: Google Blocks All Referrers Data Also in Google WebMaster Tools | Latest Social Media News | Scoop.it
Last week, Google moved to send all searches through Google SSL Search, setting up the ultimate end of keyword data passed along via referrers non-advertisers.

Via Robin Good
Robin Good's curator insight, October 1, 2013 12:11 PM


Danny Sullivan reports today on Search Engine Land: "Last week, Google moved to send all searches through Google SSL Search, setting up the ultimate end of keyword data passed along via referrers non-advertisers. Now, Google’s official alternative channel for this information — Google Webmaster Tools — has also stopped sharing the data, most likely due to a bug."


You can check for yourself: go to your Google Webmaster Tools and see if you see any referrer data past Sept.25th. I don't. What about you?



Very worrisome for whoever relies a lot on keyword data. 8/10


Full article: http://searchengineland.com/google-webmaster-tools-blocks-keywords-173153 





sophiedesc's curator insight, October 1, 2013 12:16 PM
"A Bug Or An Intentional Move?"
jmwakasege's comment, October 2, 2013 12:00 AM
Content marketer should brace themselves, this might be just a warm up from Google.
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Help Customers Find You: How to Use Keywords on Your Social Networks

Help Customers Find You: How to Use Keywords on Your Social Networks | Latest Social Media News | Scoop.it

In this article, KISSmetrics demonstrate step by step, some of the places and different ways you can use keywords on your social media pages . . .

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Rescooped by Gerrit Bes from Curation Revolution
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7 SEO Common and Dangerous Misconceptions Put Right [+ @ScentTrail Notes]

7 SEO Common and Dangerous Misconceptions Put Right [+ @ScentTrail Notes] | Latest Social Media News | Scoop.it
Here are 7 common misconceptions some have about search engine optimization.

Via malek, Martin (Marty) Smith
malek's curator insight, December 11, 2013 9:13 AM

 Rather than chasing Google+1s of content, your time is much better spent making great content."

Martin (Marty) Smith's curator insight, December 11, 2013 11:12 PM

Excellent Post, My Notes:

1. SEO is about more than keywords! Agree
 Hummingbird's ability to handle multi-word queries is setting the stage for semantic web when search engine spiders understand context, nuance and sarcasm. Keywords are important, but the "social vitality" of your content CONFIRMS your keyword-based claims.

2. Bing Doesn't Matter. Agree
When I went to work, I "retired" last week to start my 5th company, I set up my work PC to be all BINGED up. There is enough difference between Google and Bing that I wanted to know what the other guy was thinking (and how). Bing is NOT as fast as Google and they don't understand the content as well, but unimportant they aren't.

3. Google's Hide Of Keywords Kills SEO
No death here, just have to be more intelligent about modeling our content, understanding what (in the content) is creating conversion and doing analysis BEFORE we write to know the most important keywords. If "writers" gets 3x the traffic of "contributors" then use writers.

4. Good inbound links from comments (don't be absurd, Panda helped Google SEE into all of that kind of BS so stop trying to game and create great, highly viral content instead). Comments links, almost without exception, are no follow links. If you drive links to yourself that math will stick out like the SPAM sore thumb it is.

 

5. Subheads don't matter much (this was new to me and disappointing, I still like subheads for engagement and formatting though).

6. Don't mistake serendipitous conditions for meaningful patterns - this is a general truth and one blown up for +1s. Pages that receive a lot of +1s are also receiving other kinds of benefits, accolades and links. MOZ pointed out that just because two things happen together doesn't mean there is a cause and effect relationship and good idea to remember at all times and in all things Internet marketing.

7. No higher rank from authorship....yet. Not sure my friend Mark Traphagen would agree, but not important enough to get all bent out of shape over in an excellent post.

 

More on Gplus
https://plus.google.com/102639884404823294558/posts/2iFLkcgSkAT

Rescooped by Gerrit Bes from Internet Marketing Strategy 2.0
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Google Hides 75% of Search Terms and Encrypts Searches Also for Non-Signed In Users

Google Hides 75% of Search Terms and Encrypts Searches Also for Non-Signed In Users | Latest Social Media News | Scoop.it
In the past month, Google quietly made a change aimed at encrypting all search activity — except for clicks on ads.

Via Robin Good
Robin Good's curator insight, September 24, 2013 10:33 AM



Danny Sullivan reports on SearchEngineLand about the recent quiet change by Google aimed a encryprinting all users search activity.


"Google says this has been done to provide “extra protection” for searchers, and the company may be aiming to block NSA spying activity. Possibly, it’s a move to increase ad sales."


What's the truth? No-one is really sure at the moment, but if you want to find out exactly why this is quite relevant to independent publishers and - better yet - how to still access and archive most of those keywords, read the rest of this good article.



Informative. Very useful. 8/10


Read the full story here: http://searchengineland.com/post-prism-google-secure-searches-172487