Google SEO Search Commands

MasterSiteManager offers some great tools for monitoring your SEO statistics “at a glance” – but it’s not a “research” tool.

So today I wanted to share some common and uncommon Google’s link commands that you can use for SEO in order to check on the performance of your website(s) and your competitor’s website(s).

Using these commands is really easy and quick too.  To use them just type the command into the Google’s search box. Google commands always look like this -  “command:query”

Here are my favorites. Have fun!

link: YourWebsite.com – Displays other pages that link TO your URL. (You can put your competitors in here as well icon wink Google SEO Search Commands

related: YourWebsite.com – Displays other related websites Google has in its index, that they think are related to this URL.

site: YourWebsite.com – Restricts search to this domain only – Displays all the pages Google has currently in it’s index of YOUR site.

allinurl: Keyword Term – shows only pages with the keyword term in the URL

inURL:  Keyword Term – Like allinurl but only for the next query word

allintitle: Keyword Term – Shows only results with the keyword term in title

allintext: Keyword – Searches within text of pages only, but not in the links or page title.

allinlinks: Keyword – searches only within links, not text or title

cache: YourWebsite.com – Shows the Google cache information for that web page

info: YourWebsite.com – Shows links to related searches, back links and pages containing the URL (similar to as typing the URL into the search box)

Here are some lesser know commands that aren’t related to SEO, but they are pretty handy.

spell: Keyword – Google will check your spelling

stocks: Symbol – Google will look up the stock index

phone numbers – Enter a query string that looks like a phone number and have the name and address displayed

Do you have any other Google hacks, tricks or tips that you can share with us? If you do please enter them into the comment box below.

Posted in SEO News & Tips | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

New SEO Reports Just Released

Hey guys, based on the feed back from our users and friends, we’ve added some really cool new SEO Tracking Reports and Keyword Tracking Reports that you can now generate as a .CVS or .PDF file.

Plus we’ve added some new sub-menus to the control panel to make it even easier to navigate your Master Site Manager SEO software account as well as save you even more time then ever! Check it out!

Posted in SEO Help Videos | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Ranking Triad – Is it BS?

Perpetual Traffic Report

Posted in SEO News & Tips | Tagged , | Leave a comment

SEO Mental Masturbation and Ego Gratification

Ok, I know that’s a pretty graphic title for this post but if Sammy Hagar can use the word “Mental Masturbation” in a top 40 song about Rock and Roll, then I can use it when talking about SEO.

In fact, it’s even more appropriate because that’s what we ALL do when it comes to SEO.

Perhaps you’ve heard the term “Googlebate”? We’ve all done it… Come on you can admit it, we’re all friends here right? Wink, wink…

For those of you who don’t know, “Googlebating” is when we type our own name into Google to see how many pages Google returns that shows our name.

For example, look at the search term of SEO Google guy, Mr. Matt Cutts.

mattcutts3 SEO Mental Masturbation and Ego Gratification

“Google-bating” for some people it’s become like a competitive sport! It’s even more so when it comes to SEO because when it comes to making money online via SEO, it comes down to traffic. And you get the most traffic by being #1.

The Urban Dictionary gives this definition of “Mental Masturbation” – “The act of engaging in useless yet intellectually stimulating conversation, usually as an excuse to avoid taking constructive action….

And here’s where a lot of webmasters AND professional SEO’s get into trouble.  Because they waste time day after day checking their stats to see if their keywords have moved up or down.

Now on the surface I get that, but the reality is that you’re just stroking your ego. If you’re keywords are up, you’re happy for the day. If they’re down, you’re mood changes and it ruins your whole day.

But the fact is that NO lasting search engine result is going to happen on a day to day basis. Sure we’ve all seen cases where somebody (maybe even you) submitted a video to YouTube and your ranking (for the video…) went to # 1 for a day or two. But then after 3 or 4 days, the listing vanished only to resurface two weeks later at #15, or #30 or #163.

You see the point….

Sure you can concentrate on trying to make some “quick money” by being #1 for 24 hours, but is that a smart long term business strategy? If it is, let me know because I haven’t seen it work for any of the markets I’m in.

Guys don’t waste your time checking your search engine rankings daily (or even several times a day  – like I’ve seen some people do), you’re just wasting time on an activity that is not going to make you more money.

Yes, it’s true, Google is so screwed up right now that you could put up a page or video and using a combination of tricks, get that new link indexed and ranking with in as little as 20 minutes or less. But it’s a temporary ranking that in all likelihood will change within a day or so.

So instead of checking all the time to see how you’ve “done”, instead spend that time creating new content, getting new back-links, making your product better, or a hundred and one other things that will make you money.

Don’t be a slave to your rankings. They will change, so check them 3 times a week at most and you’ll find that you’re a lot more centered, have a much better over all perspective on what’s important and your over all SEO strategy.

Oh, and since we’re talking about Sammy Hagar…..  Here’s a shout out to my good friend and SEO master Jerry West!

jw SEO Mental Masturbation and Ego Gratification

Posted in SEO News & Tips | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Mayday Update by Google Changes How It Values Long Tail Searches

Last week  Matt Cutts confirmed during Q&A, that the new “Mayday” update is in fact ”An algorithmic change in Google, looking for higher quality sites to surface for long tail queries. It (the update) went through vigorous testing and isn’t going to be rolled back.”

Google also confirmed that this was a rankings change, not a crawling or indexing change, which seems to imply that sites getting less traffic still have their pages indexed, but some of those pages are no longer ranking as highly as before.

Based on Matt’s comment, this change impacts “long tail” traffic, which generally is from longer queries that few people search for individually, but in aggregate can provide a large percentage of traffic.

WebmasterWorld summarized what many webmasters are seeing particularly over the past few days with their Google search results. “Webmasters from very clean, very large websites report dramatic drops in long tail search traffic. MAYDAY seems to be the appropriate shout-out for those affected.”

Yes, most of these complaints come over webmasters seeing a huge drop in traffic from Google over “long tail keywords.”  Long tail keywords are  phrases that are 3 or more keywords long, sometimes also called “fat belly” keywords.

One person said he had a “traffic dropped 50% in a few days, 100,000′s of long tail k/w.” Another person “recovered until this Mid April, when it started seeing some recovery, then bang now 90% of its traffic, mostly long tail disappeared.”

This change seems to have effected only very large sites with “item” pages (ecommerce pages) that do not have a lot of incoming links to support them, are several clicks from the home page, and may not have substantial unique and value-added content on them.

For example, ecommerce type sites often have this type of structure. As a result,  these individual product pages are less likely to attract external links and the majority of the content may be imported from a manufacturer database.

Based on Matt’s comment at Google I/O, the pages that are now ranking well for these long tail queries are from “higher quality” sites (or perhaps are “higher quality” pages).

If you’re site’s been smacked with this new algorithm and your traffic is down to your internal pages, Matt Cuts suggests that site owners who are impacted re-evaluate the quality of their sites and if these sites truly are the most relevant match for the impacted queries,  determine if the the site is considered an “authority”, and ensure that the page does more than simply match the keywords in the query and is relevant and useful for that query.  (I.E. Beef up the content on those pages that are effected….)

Mat also notes that the change:

  • has nothing to do with the “Caffeine” update (an infrastructure change that is not yet fully rolled out).
  • is entirely algorithmic (and isn’t, for instance, a manual flag on individual sites).
  • impacts long tail queries more than other types
  • was fully tested and is not temporary

If you’ve been tracking your long tail keywords with Master Site Manager.com, look at the tracking chart for any of your keywords to see if there was a decline in your rankings from April 3rd to the 17th in particular.

Also check the charting trend for the last 3o days. Is it up or down? MasterSiteManager.com makes it easy to see if and or how badly this new May Day update is effecting your sites and your sales.

We’ll have another update in a few days with some ideas on what you can do to get your rankings and income back to their previous levels.

But for now, check your keyword trends and see where your keywords are headed. After all, you can’t make an informed decision about what to do next, if you don’t know where you are currently.

Till next time,

Don Schnure

Posted in SEO News & Tips | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment