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You are here: Home / Archives for Chris Crum

Comment Spammers: These Links Are Not Helping You

May 17, 2012 by Chris Crum

In light of Google’s Penguin update, it seems like a good time to suggest that you don’t spam blog comments. Even if you’re not technically spamming, and are leaving semi-thoughtful comments (but your ultimate goal is to get a link), it’s very likely that the blog you’re commenting on implements the nofollow attribute on comment links, which keeps the links from passing PageRank.

Don’t forget that nofollow was introduced with blog comments in mind. Google put out a post in early 2005 called “Preventing Comment Spam,” in which it said:

If you’re a blogger (or a blog reader), you’re painfully familiar with people who try to raise their own websites’ search engine rankings by submitting linked blog comments like “Visit my discount pharmaceuticals site.” This is called comment spam, we don’t like it either, and we’ve been testing a new tag that blocks it. From now on, when Google sees the attribute (rel=”nofollow”) on hyperlinks, those links won’t get any credit when we rank websites in our search results. This isn’t a negative vote for the site where the comment was posted; it’s just a way to make sure that spammers get no benefit from abusing public areas like blog comments, trackbacks, and referrer lists.

SEO consultant Carson Ward recently wrote a great article at SEOmoz about types of link spam to avoid. One of those was comment spam.

“If I were an engineer on a team designed to combat web spam, the very first thing I would do would be to add a classifier to blog comments,” he wrote. “I would then devalue every last one. Only then would I create exceptions where blog comments would count for anything.”

“Let’s pretend that Google counts every link equally, regardless of where it is on the page. How much do you think 1/1809th of the link juice on a low-authority page is worth to you?” he wrote, referring to a screen cap of a spam comment on a page with 1808 other comments. “Maybe I’m missing something here, because I can’t imagine spam commenting being worth anything at any price. Let’s just hope you didn’t build anchor text into those comments.”

It may seem like common sense to many, but it’s amazing how frequently comment spam occurs, even today, even on blogs that implement nofollow on comment links.

For the Bloggers

Matt Cutts put out a pretty popular blog post in 2009 about PageRank sculpting. Here’s what he had to say about blog comments in that:

Q: If I run a blog and add the nofollow attribute to links left by my commenters, doesn’t that mean less PageRank flows within my site?

A: If you think about it, that’s the way that PageRank worked even before the nofollow attribute.

Q: Okay, but doesn’t this encourage me to link out less? Should I turn off comments on my blog?

A: I wouldn’t recommend closing comments in an attempt to “hoard” your PageRank. In the same way that Google trusts sites less when they link to spammy sites or bad neighborhoods, parts of our system encourage links to good sites.

Some bloggers aren’t opposed to turning off comments though. We had a couple of interesting conversations with bloggers Jeremy Schoemaker and Michael Gray last year, following the Panda update. Panda was all about the quality of content on a page, and obviously blog comments can carry varying degrees of quality.

Schoemaker told us that he called a Google engineer friend and asked about this. Schoemaker said he was told that if anything, it’s “diluting the quality score of my page” by possibly diluting overall keyword density. Another factor could be comments that go through, but are clearly spam. These send signals that the page is not being well maintained.

Gray, who turned off his blog comments years ago, told us last year, “While I’m not living in the SEO world of 1999, things like keyword focus and density do play a role,” he adds. “If you’re doing your job as an SEO in 95% of the cases the keyword you are trying to rank for should be the most used word/phrase on your page. If you’ve gone to all the trouble to do that why would you now let and knucklehead with a keyboard and internet connection come by and screw that up with comments?”

Google says in its help center, “If you can’t or don’t want to vouch for the content of pages you link to from your site — for example, untrusted user comments or guestbook entries — you should nofollow those links. This can discourage spammers from targeting your site, and will help keep your site from inadvertently passing PageRank to bad neighborhoods on the web.”

“In particular, comment spammers may decide not to target a specific content management system or blog service if they can see that untrusted links in that service are nofollowed,” it says. “If you want to recognize and reward trustworthy contributors, you could decide to automatically or manually remove the nofollow attribute on links posted by members or users who have consistently made high-quality contributions over time.”

As far as I can tell, nofllow hasn’t done much to detract spammers, but at least it does keep you from passing PageRank to bad neighborhoods.

Filed Under: Podcasts and Blogs Tagged With: Blogs, blogs and podcasting, Google, marketing my podcast, podcast blog, podcast directory submission, podcast marketing, podcast submission, Spam, wordpress podcast plugin

Tumblr Ads Soon To Be A Reality

April 19, 2012 by Chris Crum

Earlier this week, we talked about the reasons you should be using Tumblr for business. We didn’t really go into Tumblr advertising, but it’s not really been an option. They recently launched highlighted posts, where you can pay a dollar to promote certain posts, but that’s not really much of an ad model.

Now, it appears things are changing at Tumblr, which could help drive some significant revenue from the company, while giving brands a real way of generating interest on the increasingly popular social blogging network.

On May 2nd, advertisers will be able to pay to be featured in a “Featured” section on the Tumblr dashboard, reports Mashable’s Sonia Paul, citing an announcement made by Tumblr Founder and CEO David Karp at the Ad Age Digital Conference. This space reportedly gets 120,000 impressions a day.

According to a recent AdAge interview with Karp, Tumblr itself gets 4.5 million impressions a week. In January, he said it had hit the 15 billion pageviews per month mark. That’s likely grown in the meantime.

This month, Tumblr launched some new integration with the Facebook Timeline. Judging on how that has worked for some other social sites, it’s likely to have a significant impression on Tumblr growth as well. Facebook announced last month that timeline integration had lifted Pinterest’s daily active Facebook user base by as much as 60%.

Earlier this week, we reported that Gnip and Tumblr have teamed up to make Gnip the exclusive data firehose provider for Tumblr, which could benefit marketers greatly too.

Filed Under: Podcasts and Blogs Tagged With: Blogging, Blogs, blogs and podcasting, marketing my podcast, podcast blog, podcast directory submission, podcast marketing, podcast submission, wordpress podcast plugin

Tumblr For Business: Why You Should Use It Now, And Probably More So In The Future

April 16, 2012 by Chris Crum

It may not be up there with widgets.net/wordpress-for-beginners/” title=”wordpress”>WordPress yet, as far as user adoption, but Tumblr is growing like a weed, and it has more of a social network feel than WordPress. Your business doesn’t have to be on every social network there is, but you may find Tumblr to be an untapped audience that you shouldn’t be ignoring. Luckily, Tumblr wants businesses to take part. The company tells WebProNews it’s “very encouraging of businesses that want to use Tumblr.”

“We don’t have a standard list of best practices but we love businesses to use Tumblr as an opportunity to engage with their community by actively engaging in other blogs, posting regularly, and following members of Tumblr who might be interested in your brand,” a Tumblr staff member said.

“As we grow, I’m sure that we’ll be open to business partnership opportunities, but it’s not something that I have specifics on at this time,” she said, adding that Tumblr is “always actively looking for creative ways to help out brands on Tumblr.”

This was actually the subject of a recent interview Founder and CEO David Karp did with AdAge. He said Tumblr has 4.5 billion impressions a week.

In January, Karp said Tumblr had hit 15 billion pageviews per month. That’s most likely higher by now. Earlier this month, they launched new integration with the Facebook Timeline. Based on the success other apps have had with this, you can certainly imagine how much this will increase viewership for Tumblr posts. Last month, Facebook claimed the Timeline had boosted Pinterest’s daily active Facebook user base by 60%.

Tumblr Recent Activity

Still want to ignore Tumblr?

GalleyCat has an interesting article, featuring some advice for writers straight from Tumblr’s literary outreach, Rachel Fershleiser. If your business has a blog, some of what she has to say may apply to you. Likewise if your business is looking to Tumblr to be its main blog platform.

A lot of what she has to say, would really apply to anyone using Tumblr. It’s about being active in the community, as with most social networks. She suggests finding people to follow, actively liking and reblogging posts from others, and using a bookmarklet for your browser, from the “Goodies” page, to help you “incorporate blogging into your daily life.”

Tumblr Goodies
Tumblr “Goodies”

She also stresses the importance of tagging posts with relevant topics, and not “getting fancy” with your URL. She suggests a firsnamelastname.tumblr.com approach, noting that you can still be creative with your blog’s actual title. Also, she says, “Make sure you upload an image to be your avatar so you don’t have a creepy blue default profile and choose a theme from our theme garden to customize your look.”

Hopefully you’re already active on Facebook. If so, I’d suggest taking advantage of that Tumblr timeline integration. You can do this by simply selecting “send to Facebook” when you post to Tumblr.

More generally, I’d also suggest paying attention to the Tumblr community. Look at the kinds of things that you see on Tumblr. It’s often a very visual experience. A lot of animated gifs. Look at what’s being reblogged. Can you create quick, easy Tumblr content that takes what this content does well, but make it your own? I’m not saying you have to use animated gifs, but they certainly are popular on Tumblr. Tumblr even increased the size limit for them a few months ago.

Tumblr has a paid “highlighted posts” feature, which you can use to help promote certain posts. It costs a dollar. “Every now and then, a post comes along that’s meant for big things. It could be pulling the wraps off your new project, promoting your next show, raising awareness for a cause, or just sharing a truly incredible photo,” Tumblr said, when announcing the feature in February.

As I said at the time, I’m not really sure just how effective this is for making posts standout. It adds a sticker like this (albeit, a customizable one):

Highlighted posts on Tumblr

They do give you a lot of options on the customization, as far as what it says:

Highlighted post options on Tumblr

Karp did note in the AdAge interview that the feature wasn’t really designed with brands in mind. “We’re not expecting Vogue to spend a buck on every one of their posts to make it stand out,” he’s quoted as saying. “In fact, that would make the experience kind of crappy.” He did mention, however, that he likes how Reuters uses it to highlight breaking news.

Businesses might have more Tumblr features to work with soon.

“We want to offer a set of nuanced creative tools for users on Tumblr,” he’s quoted as saying. “And [highlight posts] was the right starting point. And this is not the first user-oriented promotional paid feature. There are two in production — the highlight posts and the ability to purchase and sell themes, but before that we had the ability to put your blog’s avatar up on the dashboard. We tested the ability to promote yourself in our directories. That was one of the most successful revenue-generating features, not only in driving traffic to our blogs but in acting as a filter on our network, and it’s something we want to get back to very soon.”

He also implies that directory improvements for brands are on the horizon.

One big takeaway I get from that interview is that Tumblr, in general, wasn’t designed for brands, but brands flocked to it anyway to find it useful. Now, Tumblr is acknowledging this, and seems to be thinking about how it can become better for brands moving forward. My guess is that over the next year or two, we will start seeing a much bigger brand presence on the service, and a lot more tools provided by Tumblr, which will prove beneficial.

There may not be as much to work with right now, but there is still plenty of opportunity. Tumblr’s been around for a while. It was founded in 2007, but it’s still the early days, given the growth it’s seeing, it’s going to get a lot bigger. It might be wise to start building your Tumblr community sooner rather than later, so when more useful tools come out, you can use them more effectively and not have to start completely from scratch.

Filed Under: Podcasts and Blogs Tagged With: Blogging, Blogs, blogs and podcasting, marketing my podcast, podcast blog, podcast directory submission, podcast marketing, podcast submission, wordpress podcast plugin

Blogging Guidelines Already Unpopular With Bloggers

March 12, 2012 by Chris Crum

Earlier, I wrote about these new content curation/news aggregation guideline initiatives that were brought up at SXSW, and first reported on by The New York Times’ David Carr. I didn’t look much at what others were saying about them before I shared my own thoughts (which are that they won’t work, basically).

Since then, I’ve looked at some other articles that are making the rounds, and I get the idea that most in the industry are of a similar mindset. Hamilton Nolan, an editor for the popular Gawker framed his take under the headline, “We Don’t Need No Stinking Approval From the Blog Police“.

“The day that I ask the editor of Esquire for a seal of approval on my blogging is the day that I sign a fabulously lucrative contract to write for Esquire.com,” he says.

The editor of Esquire, by the way, is part of the Council on Ethical Blogging and Aggregation, described in Carr’s report, though little is known at this point about the guidelines this council wants to bring to the Internet. The Curator’s Code, has a bit more clarity around it, in that it appears to simply be a more visual way to use “via” and “hat tip” without adding much incentive (to anyone, including the original content creator) that isn’t present with a simple link saying “via” or “hat tip” (unless I’m missing something).

“The motives are honorable, the objectives reasonable, and the timing … timely,” says Rob Beschizza at BoingBoing of the Council. “But no-one is going to care about these folks or whatever theses they nail to pastebin’s door, except for their entertainment value. The problem isn’t that we lack a necessary formal system of crediting and linking to sources. The problem is that people break and exploit social norms and standards, which can’t be regulated by committees.”

ReadWriteEnterprise’s Scott Fulton has an interesting angle on the “Curator’s Code”. He uses the code on his article about it, and goes so far as to propose a third entry:

I agree with Popova [the person behind the Code] that there is a fundamental disconnect in the way we pass on information through this medium, and I also agree that it is ethically prudent to attribute what we’ve learned to where we’ve learned it. I may even use her symbols because it’s a good idea to do so. But I fear that, in the interest of substantiating this horribly inefficient system we’ve concocted for disseminating information by attaching it to 1) noise and 2) reverb, we are confusing reproduction with creativity, and confusing source with origin.

So in addition to the two characters Popova has appropriated, may I suggest a third: one which enables someone not to just cite where information was discovered, but where the person citing it believes it originated. This way, someone linking to this article I’ve just written will accept it for what it is: a comment as opposed to a genuine flash of original inspiration or an original exercise in journalism. Not everything I produce is worthy of exaltation.

I still fail to see how these symbols and code do anything to improve the situation over linking.

Furthermore, it will be interesting to see if Fulton continues to use the symbols on future articles.

I like Danny Sullivan’s take:

@dannysullivan
Danny Sullivan
Code Of Conduct For Aggregators? Can we also have one where newspapers link to sources they site or pick tips from? http://t.co/3jMLYLNn 14 hours ago via Seesmic twhirl ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

Chris O’Shea at FishbowlNY says, “As aggregators ourselves, we completely agree that there should be some sort of standard. But there’s a couple problems with the CEBA. Maybe the most troubling thing is that for a group developing rules for bloggers, there aren’t many bloggers taking part.”

Do you write for the web? What do you think of the Council and the Curator’s Code?

Filed Under: Podcasts and Blogs Tagged With: Blogging, Blogs, blogs and podcasting, Journalism, marketing my podcast, media, podcast blog, podcast directory submission, podcast marketing, podcast submission, wordpress podcast plugin

Views By Country WordPress.com Feature Launched

March 9, 2012 by Chris Crum

WordPress announced that there’s a new “Views by Country” option available from the My Stats tab on the WordPress.com homepage. The feature is designed to let bloggers quickly see where there audience is around the globe.

“When you click on or hover over a country name, the map zooms in so you can really get a feel for all the parts of the planet your content has reached,” explains Jeff Bowen on the WordPress.com blog.

“The Summaries page shows you country stats for the previous week, month, quarter and all time, but keep in mind this feature is new and views by country are not available prior to March 2012,” he adds.

He also hints that more features are on the way for the My Stats tab.

WordPress.com blogs have been getting a lot of features lately. Other recent additions include: comment notifications, a Chrome extension, and increased storage limits.

Filed Under: Podcasts and Blogs Tagged With: Blogging, Blogs, blogs and podcasting, marketing my podcast, podcast blog, podcast directory submission, podcast marketing, podcast submission, wordpress podcast plugin

TechCrunch Sheds Another Of Its Old School Writers

February 24, 2012 by Chris Crum

After AOL acquired TechCrunch, the popular tech blog started going through a lot of changes. They weren’t all immediately noticeable, but it didn’t take too long for things to be very publicly coming apart at the seams.

That’s no slight on TechCrunch as it stands today. It still has writers that deserve the respect of being taken seriously. Some of the old school TechCrunch writers are still there, for that matter. It’s just that they keep leaving, one by one. Nobody’s saying TechCrunch can’t continue to thrive as a quality tech publication, but there’s no denying that things are rapidly changing.

It began mainly when founder Michael Arrington had that whole Crunchfund thing blow up in the media. If you care enough to be reading this story, you’re probably already familiar with that story. Other writers followed Arrington out the door. Paul Carr was early to do so. Others that have since left include: MG Siegler, Sarah Lacy, CEO Heather Harde, Robin Wauters, and now it’s Jason Kincaid. Forgive me if I left any out.

For those who have been reading TechCrunch for a substantial amount of time, it’s easy to see that this is the bulk of the writers that made the blog what it would become.

Arrington would go on to start his Uncrunched blog. Some of us wondered if this would become the next TechCrunch eventually. That changed when PandoDaily was launched earlier this year, led by Lacy, and also including writing from Arrington, Siegler and Carr. It will not be surprising to anyone if Kincaid and some of the others end up writing for PandoDaily as well (I should point out that Siegler still does contribute to TechCrunch some).

Here are a few tweets from TechCrunch editor Erick Schonfeld and Kincaide himself. Kincaid’s links to his explanation.

@erickschonfeld
Erick Schonfeld
Yes, @jasonkincaid is leaving TechCrunch. A terrific writer who is ready to do something else. I’ll let him explain why. 50 minutes ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

@erickschonfeld
Erick Schonfeld
@sarahcuda @eldon Maybe he wants to say goodbye in his own way instead of grandstanding like some other former TC writers. 41 minutes ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

@jasonkincaid
Jason Kincaid
A Farewell Ahoy. Thank you to TechCrunch — and all of its readers — for an amazing four years. http://t.co/BRuJEQvh 10 minutes ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

@jasonkincaid
Jason Kincaid
I should add that @erickschonfeld graciously offered to let me publish this on TC, but I thought it would be better suited for my own blog. 10 minutes ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

In other AOL Tech publication staff loss news, Engadget Editorial Director Joshua Fruhlinger is reportedly leaving for TMZ.

Filed Under: Podcasts and Blogs Tagged With: Aol, Blogs, blogs and podcasting, marketing my podcast, media, podcast blog, podcast directory submission, podcast marketing, podcast submission, wordpress podcast plugin

Content Marketing Infographic Looks At “Heart Of Online Success”

February 20, 2012 by Chris Crum

Content+ put together the following infographic breaking down “the anatomy of content marketing,” which it calls the “heart of online success”. It draws on data from a variety of sources as cited at the bottom.

Some interesting stats it lays out:

- Word of mouth is the primary factor behind up to 50% of buying decisions
- Blogs on company sites result in 55% more visitors
- Companies with blogs get 97% more inbound links than others
- 37% of marketers say blogs are the most valuable content type for marketing

That’s just a few.

The anatomy of content marketing - the heart of online success

Filed Under: Podcasts and Blogs Tagged With: Blogs, blogs and podcasting, marketing my podcast, podcast blog, podcast directory submission, podcast marketing, podcast submission, wordpress podcast plugin

Google Stops Indexing Blogger Blogs On Custom Domains

February 17, 2012 by Chris Crum

Google’s Blogger has had some issues where new posts on custom domains aren’t being indexed by Google.

Bloggers have been complaining about it, understandably, on Google’s Webmaster Help forum (via Barry Schwartz).

Apparently, Google initially thought it was happening as the result of normal updating, but Google’s John Mueller chimed in to say, “We hear from your posts here that these fluctuations haven’t settled down for some of you, so we’re definitely still looking into those details.”

“Fluctuations in crawling and indexing can be normal, and are to be expected,” he added. “While we work hard to make the processes as stable as possible, temporary changes can occur over time. In this case, it looks like we may have reduced crawling of some sites temporarily (this should be back to normal since several days though). You can see our crawling activity in your server logs, or in the Webmaster Tools “Crawl stats” section. If you have seen fluctuations like that in this time, keep in mind that it may take a bit of time for things to settle back down again.”

“Generally speaking, one possible way to make sure that technical fluctuations like these are resolved as quickly as possible is to make sure that you have a fantastic website,” he continued. “While the quality of your website won’t keep technical issues away completely, it can help to make sure that our algorithms are happy to spend a significant part of their time/resources on crawling and indexing your content in an optimal way. While I haven’t reviewed all of the sites that posted here, some of them do look like they could be somewhat improved. If you’re unsure what that could involve, I’d recommend starting a new thread here, listing your site’s URL, the goals of your site, and asking for honest & open feedback from the community at large. A good rule of thumb is to try to be the absolute best, by far, website in your niche — don’t focus on other websites that are ‘just as bad’ or ‘doing the same thing.’”

Earlier this month, Google revealed that it was redirecting Blogger blogs to country-specific URLs. So, for example, people in India trying to navigate to a Blogger.com blog, would be redirected to the country-code top level domain (blogger.in).

Filed Under: Podcasts and Blogs Tagged With: Blogger, Blogs, blogs and podcasting, Google, marketing my podcast, podcast blog, podcast directory submission, podcast marketing, podcast submission, wordpress podcast plugin

WordPress.com Gets Comment Notifications

February 10, 2012 by Chris Crum

WordPress announced that WordPress.com blogs are now getting comment notifications, with moderation and reply functionality. Approve, spam and trash links appear in the notifications for those who have permission to moderate.

“Clicking Reply automatically approves a comment and displays an area for you to type a reply in,” says Greg on the WordPress.com blog. “When you’re done, just click Reply and you can get back to whatever you were working on, without having to navigate to the dashboard to manage your comments.”

If you use threaded comments, you’ll see when a person responds directly to you in the notification.

Comments can still be managed from the dashboard, of course.

This is just the newest in a series of recent improvements to the WordPress.com experience. A couple weeks ago, they launched a Chrome extension, giving users the ability to use WordPress.com from other sites.

Last month, they upped the storage limit.

Filed Under: Podcasts and Blogs Tagged With: Blogging, Blogs, blogs and podcasting, marketing my podcast, podcast blog, podcast directory submission, podcast marketing, podcast submission, wordpress podcast plugin

Tumblr Highlighted Posts Feature Launches

February 3, 2012 by Chris Crum

Tumblr announced the launch of a new feature called “Highlighted Posts”. A post on the Tumblr Staff Blog explains:

Every now and then, a post comes along that’s meant for big things. It could be pulling the wraps off your new project, promoting your next show, raising awareness for a cause, or just sharing a truly incredible photo.

Today you’ll have a new option to Highlight those extra-important posts. For one dollar, your post will stand out in the Dashboard with a customizable sticker to make sure your followers take notice!

Interesting monetization strategy. A buck for a customizable sticker.

Tumblr highlighted posts

I’m not sure how much this will help items stand out. Tumblr already gives you options to create very visual posts, with images (including animated gifs) and videos.

I guess anything you can do to stand out will help. Tumblr is getting 15 billion pageviews a month these days, so you might as well do what you can, if it’s worth it to you.

Here are the options Tumblr gives you:

Tumblr highlighted options

Filed Under: Podcasts and Blogs Tagged With: Blogging, Blogs, blogs and podcasting, marketing my podcast, podcast blog, podcast directory submission, podcast marketing, podcast submission, wordpress podcast plugin
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