Raven SEO Weekly Digest – Issue 22
Your Site Got Hacked, Now What?
Having your site hacked can be very demoralizing and the clean-up very time consuming. You’ve put a lot of hard work and effort into achieving and maintaining your SERP’s only for them to disappear like a flying tank. Fear not, the Google Webmaster Central team have provided us with a guide on how to recover from your site being hacked.
Yahoo! Gets Serious – Beefs Up Yahoo! Services
Google Analytics and Microsoft’s adCenter Analytics — both of which you should be very familiar with. Not to be outdone, Yahoo! announced it was jumping on the web analytics bandwagon this week by purchasing IndexTools Analytics. The acquisition of IndexTools’ assets is intended to maximize its clients online marketing efforts. Considering the on-again, off-again takeover deal with Microsoft, this is certainly a forward thinking move by Yahoo!
Your Clients Aren’t the Only Ones Who Fill Out Your Forms
Experienced SEO specialists understand that ensuring someone can reach every page on a website via normal HTML links is good practice — if the user can navigate through those links, the Googlebot (and other search engine bots) can too. However, websites that use a lot of dropdown boxes are at a disadvantage — search engines don’t know how to handle them. Matt Cutts explains that Google is now finding ways to crawl through forms and dropdown boxes and has already began to do so on a small number of high quality websites. Matt explains that you can in fact block the crawl with a robots.txt if you’d prefer not to have those links discovered.
Raven Recap
- The Trouble with SERP Tracking
- SEO Daily Reading — Issue 48
- SEO Daily Reading — Issue 49
- SEO Daily Reading — Issue 50
- Good Web Design Can Equal Good SEO
Filed under: SEO Weekly Digest
I’m using the google analytics at the moment which is fairly good There has been a lot of talk about yahoo taking over IndexTools but I don’t like to fix somethings that isn’t broken. Should I be trying out IndexTools?