Dr. Pott Suchmaschinen Weißbuch

21. November 2007

Frage: Bitte sehen Sie sich mal dieses Thema von Dr. Oliver Pott näher an. Was halten Sie davon? Über eine Antwort würde ich mich sehr freuen. Freundliche Grüsse (Absender liegt vor).

—– Weitergeleitete Mail —-

Von: Dr. Oliver Pott
An: xxxxxxxx
Betreff: NEU: Das Suchmaschinen-Weißbuch

Hallo xxxxxxx,

heute startet mein ganz neues „Suchmaschinen-Weißbuch“ das ich mit einem der führenden deutschen Suchmaschinen-Experten gemeinsam verfasst habe: Stephan Helbig hat bereits die Website von Elton John optimiert und bekommt bis zu 1200 EUR pro STUNDE (!) für seinen Expertenrat.

Ich bin der Überzeugung, dass Ihnen im ganzen deutschsprachigen Raum niemand mehr über gute Suchmaschinenpositionen für Ihre Website erzählen kann als Stephan Helbig.

Für ein sehr eng begrenztes Kontingent habe ich einen sehr stark rabattierten Einführungspreis.

Ihr Dr. Oliver Pott

PS: Im neuen Suchmaschinen-Weißbuch nennen wir unter anderem 13 Todsünden, die fast allen Webmastern unterlaufen. Wetten, dass mindestens 2 der Fehler Ihnen unabsichtlich längst passiert sind, und wetten, dass Ihre Suchmaschinenposition sofort steigt, wenn Sie nur diese Fehler beheben oder vermeiden?
 

Antwort:

1. Was ich generell von Suchmaschinen Optimierern halte:
10 Märchen zu Suchmaschinen Marketing & SEO

2. Was Suchmaschinen Optimierer so alles anstellen:
Suche manipuliert – Google straft BMW ab

3. Was Matt Cutts von  Google empfiehlt – daran halte ich mich:
Suchmaschinen Optimierung - und was Google’s Matt Cutts dazu sagt

4. Quellen, bei denen ich mich informiere – kostenlos und immer aktuell:
z.B. Newsletter von HighRankings.com

**** 6 Newbie SEO Questions ****

Someone emailed me with a list of quick questions about some SEO terminology
they didn’t understand.  I figured if one person was looking for these
answers, many of you would be, too. 

1. What is .htaccess?
.htaccess is a configuration file that is uploaded to your Apache web server
(it doesn’t work with Windows servers).  It’s a text file that allows you to
change the way your web pages work.  For instance, you can put some
commands in the .htaccess file that password-protect certain areas of your site. 
You can also use it to create a custom 404-error page or change which page of
your site will be the default home page. 

For SEO purposes, you’ll often hear of it being used for redirects.  For
instance, if you are redesigning your website and absolutely have to change
your URLs (because you’re putting a new content management system in, for
example), then you could use your .htaccess file to set up permanent
301-redirects from the old URLs to the new. I use mine most often to turn
long URLs (like those of affiliate links) into short, easy-to-remember URLs.

Just be careful when you use the .htaccess file for your site. One small
mistake can make your entire site stop working!  Be sure to always back up
your old .htaccess file before you upload a new one in case this happens to
you (and if you work with one often, most likely it will!).

2. What is KEI? 
KEI stands for Keyword Effectiveness Index, which is something that was
invented for users of Wordtracker’s keyword research software
<http://www.highrankings.com/wordtracker>.  It is supposed to help you
measure the competitiveness of your keyword phrases, but it’s never been a
good way to do this.  I suggest ignoring KEI altogether and looking at other
ways to measure keyword competition.  I wrote about this in a recent
newsletter article, “Why Use Keyword Research Tools?” here:
<http://www.highrankings.com/advisor/why-keyword-research/>.

3. What are supplemental results? 
If a page is shown that is in the supplemental results, Google indicates
this in their search results pages (SERPs).  It doesn’t mean that your page
or site is banned or penalized.  More often than not, pages that are similar
to other pages (or complete duplicates) are the ones that show up in the
supplemental results.  It’s generally not something to worry about unless
tons of the pages on your site start showing up there. When that happens
you’ll need to figure out why and fix whatever might be causing the problem.

4. What is a link farm?
There are many definitions of a link farm, but I like to go with the
traditional one.  That is, a link farm is a set of websites that have all
decided to link to each other. It’s basically done through a links page
that every site from the link farm is required to upload to their site.
Every time a new site is added to the farm, it would get added to the links
page for everyone to re-upload.  There have been hundreds of variations on
this basic idea through the years. 

Suffice it to say that you want to stay as far away as possible from any
kind of linking scheme whatsoever.  Especially one that requires you to link
to sites that you might not really recommend to your target audience.

5. When does PageRank update?
I believe that real PageRank — the one that only Google knows about –
updates all the time.  Toolbar PageRank, on the other hand, updates only
about once a quarter.  This is why it’s important never to use what you see
in the green graph of your toolbar as any true measurement of anything.  But
it’s fine to look at it as long as you take the information it provides with
a grain of salt.

6. What is a 3-way link? 
A 3-way link is just another crazy linking scheme that some spammers dreamed
up when they thought that the typical “you link to me and I’ll link back”
scheme wasn’t working anymore. With the 3-way link, you link to someone,
and they link to someone else, and that someone else links back to you.
It’s silly, and nothing you need to do. If you want a really *good* linking
scheme, the best is the Trapezoidal Linking Matriflux technique:
<http://www.insearchofstuff.com/trapezoidal-linking-matriflux-with-php/>.
(I even have the t-shirt!)

 

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