Like many overly-connected web junkies, I find myself increasingly overwhelmed by information, resources and news. Sorting the signal from the noise is essential to staying sane, but missing an important development can be costly. To balance this conflict, I've recently re-arranged my daily reading habits (which I've written about several times before) and my Firefox sidebar (a critical feature that keeps me from switching to Chrome).
I'll start by sharing my top 10 sources in the field of search & SEO, then give you a full link list for those interested in seeing all the resources I use. I've whittled the list down to just ten to help maximize value while minimizing time expended (in my less busy days, I'd read 4-5 dozen blogs daily and even more than that each week).
Top 10 Search / SEO Blogs
#1 - Search Engine Land
- Why I Read It: For several years now, SELand has been the fastest, most accurate and well-written news source in the world of search. The news pieces in particular provide deep, useful, interesting coverage of their subjects, and though some of the columns on tactics/strategies are not as high quality, a few are still worth a read. Overall, SELand is the best place to keep up with the overall search/technology industry, and that's important to anyone operating a business in the field.
- Focus: Search industry and search engine news
- Update Frequency: Multiple times daily
#2 - SEOmoz
- Why I Read It: Obviously, it's hard not to be biased, but removing the personal interest, the SEOmoz Blog is still my favorite source for tactical & strategic advice, as well as "how-to" content. I'm personally responsible for 1 out of every 4-6 articles, but the other 75%+ almost always give me insight into something new. The comments are also, IMO, often as good or better than the posts - the moz community attracts a lot of talented, open, sharing professionals and that keeps me reading daily.
- Focus: SEO & web marketing tactics & strategies
- Update Frequency: 1-2 posts per weekday
#3 - SEOBook
- Why I Read It: The SEOBook blog occassionally offers some highly useful advice or new tactics, but recently, most of the commentary focuses on the shifting trends in the SEO industry, along with a healthy dose of engine and establishment-critical editorials. These are often quite instructive on their own, and I think more than a few have had substantive impact on changing the direction of players big and small.
- Focus: Inudstry trends as they relate to SEO; Editorials on abuse & manipulation
- Update Frequency: 1-3X per week
#4 - Search Engine Roundtable
- Why I Read It: Barry Schwartz has long maintained this bastion of recaps, roundups and highlights from search-related discussions and forums across the web. The topics are varied, but usually useful and interesting enough to warrant at least a daily browse or two.
- Focus: Roundup of forum topics, industry news, SEO discussions
- Update Frequency: 3-4X Daily
#5 - Search Engine Journal
- Why I Read It: The Journal strikes a nice balance between tactical/strategic articles and industry coverage, and anything SELand misses is often here quite quickly. They also do some nice roundups of tools and resources, which I find useful from an analysis & competitive research perspective.
- Focus: Indsutry News, Tactics, Tools & Resources
- Update Frequency: 2-3X Daily
#6 - Conversation Marketing
- Why I Read It: I think Ian Lurie might be the fastest rising on my list. His blog has gone from ocassionally interesting to nearly indispensable over the last 18 months, as the quality of content, focus on smart web/SEO strategies and witty humor shine through. As far as advice/strategy blogs go in the web marketing field, his is one of my favorites for consistently great quality.
- Focus: Strategic advice, how-to articles and the occassional humorous rant
- Update Frequency: 2-4X weekly
#7 - SEO By the Sea
- Why I Read It: Bill Slawski takes a unique approach to the SEO field, covering patent applications, IR papers, algorithmic search technology and other technically interesting and often useful topics. There's probably no better analysis source out there for this niche, and Bill's work will often inspire posts here on SEOmoz (e.g. 17 Ways Search Engines Judge the Value of a Link).
- Focus: IR papers, patents and search technology
- Update Frequency: 1-3X per week
#8 - Blogstorm
- Why I Read It: Although Blogstorm doesn't update as frequently as some of the others, neraly every post is excellent. In the last 6 months, I've been seriously impressed by the uniqueness of the material covered and the insight shown by the writers (mostly Patrick Altoft with occassional other contributors). One of my favorites, for example, was their update to some of the AOL CTR data, which I didn't see well covered elsewhere.
- Focus: SEO insider analysis, strategies and research coverage
- Update Frequency: 3-5X monthly
#9 - Dave Naylor
- Why I Read It: Dave's depth of knowledge is legendary and unlike many successful business owners in the field, he's personally kept himself deeply aware of and involved in SEO campaigns. This acute attention to the goings-on of the search rankings have made his articles priceless (even if the grammar/spelling isn't always stellar). The staff, who write 50%+ of the content these days, are also impressively knowledgable and maintain a good level of discourse and disclosure.
- Focus: Organic search rankings analysis and macro-industry trends
- Update Frequency: 1-3X weekly
#10 - Marketing Pilgrim
- Why I Read It: A good mix of writers cover the search industry news and some tactical/strategic subjects as well. The writing style is compelling and it's great to get an alternative perspective. I've also noticed that MP will sometimes find a news item that other sites miss and I really appreciate the feeling of comprehensiveness that comes from following them + SELand & SERoundtable.
- Focus: Industry news, tactical advice and a bit of reputation/social management
- Update Frequency: 2-3X daily
Other sites that I'll read regularly (who only barely missed my top 10) include Distilled, YOUmoz, Performable, Chris Brogan, the Webmaster Central Blog, Eric Enge, Avinash Kaushik, SEWatch, Gil Reich & the eMarketer blog. I also highly recommend skimming through SEO Alltop, as it lets me quickly review anything from the longer tail of SEO sites.
The rest of my Firefox sidebar is listed below, sorted into sections according to the folders I use. Note that because I've got the SEOmoz toolbar (mozBar), I use that to access all the moz SEO tools rather than replicating them in my sidebar. I've also been able to ditch my large collection of bookmarklets thanks to the mozBar, but if you prefer to keep them, here's a great set of 30 SEO Bookmarklets (all draggable).
Rand's Firefox Sidebar
- Social Buzz
- Tech / Entrepreneur Blogs
- Search / Marketing Blogs
- SEO & Web Tools
- Social World
- News
- NYTimes | Most Emailed
- Slate Magazine
- BBC News
- The Stranger (Local Seattle Blog/News)
- Electoral-Vote
- National Geographic News
- Free Time
- Everywhereist (the best part of my day)
- The Sixty One
- Drawar
- MetaCritic
- Web Boggle
- Rotten Tomatoes
- Hulu
Hopefully some kind individual in the comments will build a nice HTML file for those of you who'd like to directly import this list. :-)
UPDATE: TopRank just published a list of the most subscribed-to blogs in the SEO field that can also be a great resource for those interested.
p.s. We've only got 60 out of 310 seats left for the Seattle Training Seminar (August 30-31) and just opened up a few more spots for the Tools Training (Sept. 1). Hope to see you there.
There are some top sites in this list. I do wish though that SEL, SEObytheSEA and a few of the others would syndicate their full feeds via RSS.
Youmoz definitely deserves a shout out. There's a lot of talented new SEO minds coming up with a bunch of good ideas, and sharing them! Actionable blog posting in SEO is usually something I'm looking out for. On that note, I'm off to work even harder on my blog.
YOUmoz is one of the best kept SEO secrets out there. I'm still a bit bewildered by the fact that Feedburner lists only 2243 subscribers.
Speaking of YOUmoz, when are you going to submit a post?!?
Oh snap Casey. I feel like the kid at the public pool in the summertime watching kid after kid go on the high dive. Wanting to be one of them, but still a bit scared to actually do it.
Believe or not, I have a fat folder full of ideas and partial attempts at writing a post. Invariably, someone will write a killer post and I'll climb back down the high dive ladder thinking, "OK, I'll do it another day"
Well if you need someone to take a look at it before you post it, feel free to contact me. I'll be nice, I promise!
Consider me too... a post from you cannot be worst than mine ;)
Ok, ok. I will get the folder out and try to come up with a viable idea. If I actually do end up completing it, I'll send y'all a copy for review.
My biggest qualm with posting on Youmoz is wondering if someone's already covered the topic and being redundant in my opinion/post. Yah, there's a good chance that no one has, but stilll...
I realize that the editorial staff probably will filter that out, but also writing something not only germane to the interests of people who read the Youmoz's, but also compelling doesn't take just an hour or two...that is if you want to be 1) accurate, 2) insightful, 3) entertaining and not full of typos (again, hoping that the editorial staff will filter these out;)
Anyhoo, I feel the same too always...just wrote a piece on SEO Consultants in each city & measuring the competition for each market, but after submission, I requested a support ticket to have it deleted. My metrics were waaaaay too general basing my assumptions off of KW data pulled from google's external kw tool. I then had another hypothesis or an additional way to measure the competitiveness of each market which I now can't even think about because I feel like I process too much info daily.
Nevertheless, it's sometimes overwhelming how much info's out there and honestly, reading through the list of sources to stay "up to date" is interesting, but also just building up that huge pile of papers in my corner of "things to read." Jeeez, I haven't read the past 2 issues of Inc. magazine I've paid for... :)
I think that one of the best values of YOUmoz is that it offers a great opportunity especially to us not english mothertongue SEOs to express our ideas and explain our experiments and point of views to a wider public than the one we are maybe used to have.
Moreover, to know that the YOUmoz has to pass the editorial exam of the SEOmoz staff is a quality mark.
The fact the subscribers are just 2243 is, imho, not really showing the real number of the YOUmoz readers, as I feel that the traffic there net to the bounce rate would show a bigger median number of visits.
p.s.: Richard, your blog is really cool. I'm glad you are thinking to work on it even more.
Thank you! Appreciate the feedback :-)
Rand - thanks for the shout-out.
Aaron's, Dave's and SEO By the Sea are on the top of my list, too. Great info on all of 'em for beginners and veterans alike.
A hint for newbies: Read early content on these blogs. If you find an article that's interesting and it's part of a series, go back to the first article. If there are 'related' links at the bottom, read those. As you work backwards you'll find you can get a great intro to the topic, and then expand your knowledge from there.
Or, e-mail the blogger. I love getting notes saying "Hey, Ian, can you write a basic post on this topic?" It gives me ideas and tells me what folks really want to read.
Great tips. These are common but neccessary tips to follow for the beginners especially.
You should definitely write a sequel like promopti suggests, on how to read the feeds and still get work done.
I have been so backed up in my RSS reader (FeedDemon)that it's all I can do to just follow the SEOmoz and YOUmoz blogs regularly. All my other feeds are catch as catch can.
That said, I'd like to add 10 more feeds that are well worth regular reading for those that have more time than I.
In no particular order:
Occam's Razor
Search Engine Guide
Unstuck Digital
Seer Interactive
Unbounce
Outspoken Media
Huo Mah
Nine By Blue
SEO Gadget
Cre8asite Forums
I think lunametrics blog (https://www.lunametrics.com/blog/) also deserve to be in the top seo blog list.
I thumb you up because - if it is valid - any source can be useful in order to find tips and inspiration.
And because your link is off of any possible spam doubt.
Bookmarks File Request Done and Done.
Direct Link to download:
https://www.geilt.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/rands-booksmarks.html
Awesome list rand. I was already subscribed to half of these. I just finished subscribing to the rest. Appreciate all the information.
How to do it:
Here are the steps for importing the HTML file of bookmarks into your Firefox bookmarks:
https://mozilla.gunnars.net/firefox_bookmarks_tutorial.html#importing_and_exporting_bookmarks
When you do the steps, you will navigate to the page with Rand's bookmarks (that geilt made), save that page to your desktop, and then import that page of links into your bookmarks.
When you save the page with Rand's bookmarks to your desktop, you may need to "Save as HTML" for the steps to work, instead of just saving the web page.
Here's the problem:
Rand is an SEO professional. SEO is his full time job, actually TEACHING and providing SEO tools is his job. So all of these resources can potentially help him.
What about us, the people who are trying to get more traffic from Google? Will SEOBook, for example, really help us (that guy criticizes almost everything)? No treally.
Same with SEJ and some other blogs. There are some useful ones like SEOByTheSea (I am a big believer that if the best way in the long run to make something work is to first learn how it actually works...which is a bit common sense but not many people embrace it).
Jest,
Can reading these blogs help people build more traffic? Yes, absolutely. If you follow all of them you'll receive a steady stream of actionable insights.
Dave, Rand, Ian, Aaron and many others have blogged for years. During that time they have covered a lot of topics in amazing detail. I find it understandable that, as mature bloggers, they should publish lots editorials and opinion stories. How interesting would it be for long-time followers if they repeated the same lessons and tips over and over?
If you want lessons to put into action then the real goldmine, IMO, are their archives. They are overflowing with knowledge, tutorials, tips, insight and more. Serious students of SEO and Internet marketing owe it to themselves to invest time studying these archives. It requires digging and sifting, but you will find more actionable knowledge in them than you can get from any book or conference.
Totally agree with you.
One thing I've learn in my life:
everything good comes from this route:
Therefore to really learn (syntesis) you need also antithesis, which mean a critical view of 1 thesis. Let's say that SEOBook has put itself on an antithetical position for many things, which is good (even if the "style" sometimes could be criticized) because it makes you reflect on the eventual faults of the antithesis.
Following this three ierarchy, I find that Sphinn also can be a great place where to find interesting debates, sometimes very "hot" ones (I remember the huge comment thread about the Bing/Google correlation experiment by SEOmoz).
I actually think it's a good idea to re-write posts and theories every now and then. Because in an industry like SEO 2009 articles are quite different from 2010 articles. There's always something new to add or remove from a post.
That's one of the reasons I hardly every go back to archives now. Because they are no longer quite accurate. Don't get me wrong, archives are good when you're trying to get a solid foundation but after a while they can become misleading...
That's what I think about SEO archives...
I agree. I'm always wary about going into archive posts, because a tip that could take hours of time away from my schedule could prove to be outdated and useless months after the post was written. It's hard to get beginner information and the fundamentals when you can never know what to rely on.
Hi there. Browse your blog roll to find what daily posts are relevant to your business at that time. Also try https://blog.mannixmarketing.com/ which is a SEO blog that does not cater necessarily to professionals. Good luck!
Thanks for the super list. I read most of them and have just added missing ones in my RSS reader.
BTW, even though the magazines & other articles/posts are piling up in the corner, I really love the list. I wish they had one of these by everyone who's successful in life. Would be curious what Gates, Dell, Buffett, etc. read every day to keep up...
Ummmmm...no Mashable.com??????????
A little bit of an oversight; but thanks for the list! Love adding this stuff to my Google CSE!
With heavy work load to stay up to date is really hard for all SEO guys. But, I added all 10 blogs to my Google reader. Thanks man!! I also know that by time list of 10 may be change some will in or some will out. Any method to update me regarding top 10 SEO blogs of industry?
Great - now my morning SEO reading has been extended to two hours... when am I going to have time for actual work???
Thanks for the compilation. I am going to check some o these out - there is definitely an over abundance of "junk" on the web, especially when it comes to opinions on SEO. It's good to have a reliable referral.
TOTALLY AGREE and think that you have some great points. I went ahead and bookmarked again - there's some great info to be had here.
Thanks and Cheers - !!
Great. I already have all 10 in my Netvibes. :)
Although I've found some new interesting stuff in your bookmarks ;)
Nice to know, I've updated my Google Reader feeds list!
Hi Rand,
Super list everyone is covered but no Matt Cutts? :-) Just kidding.
Happy Weekend,
Emil
He rarely ever blogs about SEO anymore, and when he does, every other blog in the space covers it, making his less essential nowadays. However, I will say the comments there can sometimes be interesting to skim through.
That is true, we're all learning something new every day and comments can be gold.
BTW do you ever sleep? Twitter, SEOmoz etc, always around. Don't tell me that you are like me, 4 hours of sleep, OK we're done, time to get up?
Emil
Well, yeah surely, there should be two notable ones too in the top 10. One Matt cutts, beacause he is at the head at the operations of "What Google can do to other site's ranking?" and another one is SEO.com
Good list. I didnt now about the marketing pilgrim till date. Really a good resource. These resources will definitely help both the beginners and experienced seo to gain knowledge on all about seo.
Nice sharing! :)
I would put SEOMOZ on the first spot :)
The list is correct.But too much of the info, you have chosen.I read your side. :-)
András
Have had this bookmarked...absolutely great resource. I admit, I sometimes use the links in the post to check updates on these sites (ok, well a lot)
Anyways, you might wana consider updating the screen shots for a couple of these now due to new designs.
Thanks again...
Holler
Another fantastic post Rand; thanks so much. I am constantly impressed by your commitment to transparency and your willingness to share information that others would hoard. Well done and thanks again.
oh Yah I was gonna say links to each site would be great. I can't think of any other definition of editorial links than this.
Nice nice nice. I always wanted to know what you read. Also I think you are being a bit humble by not putting seomoz on the first ;)
That was good enough for me to link to this article from my resource page. (great link bait) :)
Great list, but we'd be remiss not to mention Avinash's blog, Occam's Razor. If SEO is about accountability, then it's about analysis of analytics and I don't know of anyone more passionate and more willing to share his knowledge of analytics than Avinash.
Cheers!
Lets hope the law of reciprocity kicks in for this page lol that's a lot of outbound links
I truly LOVE the information that you guys constantly post over there at SEOMoz. I look forward to learing new information whenever i visit your blog. Besides this blog i truly love te information I get from the following blogs:
Search Engine Land
Seer Interactive
Milestone SEO
Matt Cutts Blog
If it were not for those blogs, I would be dead in the water! lol
I also love Ian Lurie.....but, it may be, in part, that I like to say his name...he has one of the cool names..lol Great list Rand! Thanks for sharing!
And, just fyi...the image for BlogStorm is linking out to David Naylor's site... not sure if that was intended...or not? But, just in case...fyi...:)
Ooh..and, of course, SEOmoz blog is always on my homepage!
That's added a few new feeds for me to follow. Cheers.
It would be interesting to know how people manage following all those blogs/feeds/subscriptions.
I currently use Google Reader as it lets me scan very quickly through all the new updates. I have over 50 subscriptions now!
I like it so much I've even been cancelling my email based subscriptions.
I've set-up Google Alerts to inform me in real-time via my Google reader. And some forums let me follow new posts via RSS so they're in there as well.
I'm not sure if this is classed as saving time or just wasting time more efficiently ;-)
thanks rand, yes these are some area we can keep updating ourselves with the current web marketing strategies . .i would also love to share the same here that would also very benefials to our mutual readers
https://www.quora.com/What-are-the-best-article-sites-for-SEO
https://www.invesp.com/blog-rank/SEO
https://seoebooklab.blogspot.com/2012/02/top-15-most-popular-seo-websites.html
great!
Spotted Panda is also a great resource for free guides on SEO, search marketing, PPC and social media -
www.spottedpanda.com
Rand, can you share your speed reading tips in the next post...I feel I already have a paralysis by RSS and now I am just adding more stuff to my overcharched reader.
Ian's blog is definitely on my list too. His linkbait post was one of my favorite of the past few months. I love case studies :)
Ian Laurie is an extremely enjoyable read every single time.
i got this and thanks randfish for such an amazing resoruces SEO blogs and links where i can increase even more learning web markting things . .!
Good list for seo blog
Thanks for sharing
There are a few that I haven't checked out yet. I'm a bit suprised at some that are left off, ahrefs has been great recently... oh jeez... that time when you comment on something 5+ years old smh
Hey Rand,
thank you for sharing this list. However, I do want to ask you what's your take on Neil Patel?
Is he worth the time?
You should also include backlinko.com -- more then All these blogs you mentioned, I found backlinko more beneficial.
Very true: The SEO Book blog occassionally offers some highly useful advice or new tactics, but recently, most of the commentary focuses on the shifting trends in the SEO industry, along with a healthy dose of engine and establishment-critical editorials.
I believe every list is personal, and this is reasonable. You can't select quality blogs by looking at their PR or Alexa :)
Here's also a hand-picked list of great SEO forums that your readers might find useful! https://www.link-assistant.com/blog/seo-forums/
Got myself some new subscriptions here, thanks for sharing!
I really enjoy and learn a lot from every whiteboard Friday episode. The presenter always discuss ideas in an organized and systematic way. Off course, the transcription is also a plus. I always get new ideas from every discussion for our site.
Thanks.
Rand Fishkin you have the excellent post, the websites you share to stay up-to-date these are really good. Because these websites are leading sites and these are having the lot of information about SEO and up-to-date the peoples with their post. Thanks for sharing the best sources.
Great list; thanks for sharing Rand. I am very curious to find out how much time you spend every day on reading blogs. Information overload is very challenging and even after you boil it down to a set number of blogs you decide to follow.. there is never enough time to read everything you would want to.
How much time does everyone here spend daily on reading blogs? I spend about 1 to 2 hrs and never find this time to be enough.
Rand,
I lot of great resources!
I agree that it can definitely be information overload sometimes, when you are trying to keep up with the industry news. It seems like everyday there is a new resource or blog that pops up. Personally I love it when I can find a new industry site that has awesome content, but I will have to say that I religiously always visit the sites you listed on a daily basis.
A few other SEO blogs that i think should be noted are Search Engine Guide, StayOnSearch and Social Media Examiner & Penn Olson (for Social news).
Awesome List Rand.Mark
Rand,
Thanks for this insightful blog. I am new to the game at 38 years young and I am fascinated with SEO, how the average Joe can level the playing field with regard to optimization and compete with the big boys with just a little bit of know-how and a willingness to do the homework. It is like the "American Dream" now has a venue in which to be realized.
I have subscribed to all ten of your recommendations and plan to stay on top of these as a part of my daily read. Between my Bible and Blogs, I might get some work done.
Thanks again Rand...look forward to getting to know you in here.
At Your Service,
Nick CovanesSuperMedia LLC
Thank you for sharing some of your secret, this is ideal for seo stand alone. thanks..
Very nice list Rand. Now I am going to have to start coming to work even earlier to stay on top of my reading! Also, you should star this issue:
https://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=45365
It deals with the lack of a side bar. As well as this seems to be assigned and in the works?
https://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=51084
Between the sidebar and a 'real' firebug alternative are the only reasons I have 100% switched to Chrome only. Getting closer though!
Awesome list Rand!
I was already subscribed mostly from the list and now subscribing few more.
Thanks for sharing!
I just clicked through and visited Blogstorm after reading your list - and it really is full of interesting stuff.
Have added it to my reader.
Yeah - I love SEO By The Sea! I'm not too familiar with the rest of them.
That is just Awesome you have a free time folder, Mine says "stuff I don't have time to look at" LOL......
I am sure that you are summing up the best stuff from these sources into the SEOMOZ-Blog, so I think it is not necessary to read those.
Anyway: Seomoz is the No.1 for me because of Rand Fishkin is writing the articles in a funny, interesting and easy to understand way.
What a great list, I thought I had found every SEO website out there but I was wrong. I would add - Vertical Measures, Hugo Guzman, and Blue Glass. Vertical Measures even mentioned Rand (i.e. Matthew Broderick) as the winner in a celebrity / SEO look alike contest. Both Vertical Measures and Blue Glass are SEO agencies (and Hugo has an agency too I think) but have quality content on their blogs. Its also good to keep an eye on what the competition is doing for their clients. I also subscribe to the SEOmoz tips / Q&A feed which keeps me up to date with all that juicy stuff too. I have 87 subscriptions in my Google Reader now, I'm wondering when it will implode into a black hole. I even took out regular news feeds such as BBC, they produce too much content everyday and I would spend hours catching up in Google Reader.
Organize your Google Reader into Topic Lists. Then you can keep your major news sites loaded and just look at SEO updates every day if thats whats you are interested in primarily.
Check World News, etc. When you have the time, by reading through the other Categories.
Beautiful thing about the web in general now, is that you can pull in as much as you want and filter out what you don't want...just in case you may have wanted that thing you would have omitted otherwise ;)
I think Gmail taught me that principle. Archive it, don't delete it.
On that note, and as a tip: Google Reader actually stores its own copy of the news feeds you pull in. This means news and blogs that are long gone and deleted will still exist in your reader. Even as a backup this is handy.
I had a friend of mine who wrote a politically questionable document during the Obama / McCain campaign, and it was forcibly removed from his site and various other ones without his knowledge/permission, I still have a copy of said Blog, because Reader grabbed it.
Hope they don't come after me now that I've publicly announced that ;)
Thanks for mentioning my blog! That's very cool of you, very humbling for me and much appreciated.
I always wanted to have this POST written here, finally got the list :) Thanks much for the list.
Thanks for the great post Rand, there are some really interesting people behind the SEO blogs which I didn't previously follow. I am now :)
Well, I know my blog *used to* be in your favorites...and you don't even follow me on twitter...where is the love? :_-(
Me love you long time Rand. Keep rocking.
I do still have Optimize&Prophesize in my occassional reading list, but you're only posting 1-2X per month, and only rarely on SEO. Still a great site for broader digital marketing (and I always love seeing you speak) :-)
Nice list...I am glad I am already covering them... :)
This is just what I was looking for. Now, the only thing I have in mind is which one of these top 10 is the best of them all. SEO I guess is an ever-changing arena.. and we need to keep updated with what's going on the World Wide Web. Thanks for sharing!
Very helpful list, thanks! Sure will check them out, although reading all of them on a regular basis is next to impossible. This post here is three days old and Im just reading it now...
It's nice to discover new tools or new interesting blogs, thanks.
This is as close we can get to "Being Rand Fishkin" ;) This post has been added to my Read It Later list.
Love the post , but where is Search Engine Watch , I would place them at number 2 - only joking
I use to follow https://www.webpronews.com, great resource for latest SEO,SEM, & marketing news..take a look!
nice list......
Awesome post, thanks Rand
Thanks for sharing this Rand. It's amazing that this list is still relevant today.
Thanks for sharing a great list for latest SEO blog.
your blog very interesting
Your blog seems to be quite informative and interesting. It focuses on useful list.....
wow great work ADMIN
plz give my some tips fr seo my website www.bloggingseopoint.com