Questions range from very simple and easy to answer to incredibly complex. Questions that I can't answer usually end up being assigned to Rand or to one of our developers. I give legal questions to Sarah, and the Distilled guys take on a fair number now too. In the eighteen months we've operated the service, I've at least read just about everything.
Thus I present to you The Best of Q&A. There is no way that I've managed to cover the entirety of our Knowledge Base, but this is at least a sample of some of the content that has made its way through the Q&A queue.
Topics come in cycles. For a while, many questions, both public and private, dealt with PageRank. It seems that, as people's understanding of toolbar PageRank, real PageRank and how it works improves, people worry less about what is shown in their toolbars.
It's hard to pick which topic comes up the most, but here are a few that are recurring:
- What can is the most a website can get away with / how should a site serve different content to search engines than it does to humans without suffering any penalties?
These questions come in all shapes and sizes, from those about age verification concerns, to whether it's okay to serve different content based upon cookies based upon returning visits. They can be difficult to answer because, as this post shows, there is plenty to debate about when this practice crosses Google's magical line. Matt Cutts' comment on that post seems to indicate that no cloaking is permitted. This isn't what I want to tell people, however, as they usually present situations where I know Rand's "pearly white hat" cloaking would be appropriate, would work and would never result in a penalty. - What can we put in our Hx tags for maximum impact?
In my opinion, there is no point getting clever with links in H1 tags. Why? Because H1 tags are supposed to denote the important information on the page in question. Linking to another page with optimised anchor text suggests that the linked-to page is more relevant for that text than the page on which the link lies. So why put that in a tag that is designed to describe the current page's content? This comes up quite a lot, mostly phrased as a question about whether this will get a site "banned."
Other questions deal with image replacement, stylistic concerns and how many instances of each tag are acceptable. - Duplicate content.
In every way, shape and form. I don't care how many times SEOs and search engine reps claim that duplicate content is no longer an issue, it will always be a problem for a large number of sites and for a number of reasons. People have concerns about everything from whether trailing slashes create duplicate content (and whether search engines can work this canonicalisation issue out for themselves) to how to fix massive duplication problems in large e-commerce sites. - Internationalis(z)ation.
Q&A often reflects the frustration of non-US based webmasters and SEOs who struggle with "international" problems. It frustrates the life out of them that Google representatives say things like, "I would recommend not redirecting users based on their location. This can be a bad user experience. It's better to allow a user to choose his version based on his searches" when, as Rand points, out, Google itself geotargets its home page and its results.
It is fantastic to have the Distilled team around to look at questions like this, as they have often dealt with the issues in real life. - Confusion over what type of links need to be nofollowed and whether one should link at all.
The FUD over paid links has made people paranoid. You knew this. However, it still surprises me what people have convinced themselves of and how much misinformation and misunderstanding flies around about links. I have had people fret about being picked off for banner advertising (which is in no way a direct, crawled, PR-passing link). In many ways, I believe last year's crack down on paid links did more to strike fear into the hearts of regular webmasters than it did cut down on spam. Of course, it was never Google's intention to make people fear linking. The search engine would be ineffective without links. However, the process of inflated, exaggerated information and hysteria convinced a lot of people that they were constantly on the verge of a penalty. - Best practices for robots.txt and meta noindex, a.k.a. epic exclusion misunderstandings.
The differences between different meta robots tags and robots.txt is widely misunderstood. Many times, people can't work out why search engines aren't doing as they're told, given a set of exclusion instructions. Pages excluded via robots.txt can still show up in some engines' search results as URLs.
If a page is excluded via robots.txt and if a robot does its job properly, it won't visit the content of that page but could still index it as a URL. Thus, any instructions a webmaster has left therein are at risk of being ignored / not seen. If a page isn't excluded via robots.txt but contains a meta noindex tag, its contents, including its links, can be visited and taken into account by search engines, but its URL won't appear in search results. This is why it's still necessary to nofollow links on pages that are noindexed if you don't want the page to pass PageRank, either at a link level or a page level.
On occasion, we receive some incredibly amusing quotes and questions as well. What follows is a small collection of excerpts from some hilarious things we've been asked / told over the past eighteen months. Ninety-nine percent of the time, questions are serious, but I absolutely love the ones that also make us laugh out loud:
I want to make sure that this site NEVER GETS PICKED UP AND INDEXED, CRAWLED, SPIDERED OR FONDLED IN ANY WAY BY ANY SEARCH ENGINE.
It took me a while to compose myself after thinking about what it would be like to be fondled by a search engine. My immediate mental image involved Googlebot tugging on the leg of my jeans and making suggestive comments.
Hi there. Can you recommend an attorney who knows technology and the Internet? Someone with tech patent experience is a must, so please don't suggest your Uncle Buck.
I have a client who knows enough SEO to get me into trouble.
A little knowledge is far more dangerous than none at all.
We'll impatiently look forward to your opinion!
We try to get to questions pretty quickly (and we're sorry when we get behind), but this certainly made me hop-to.
We usually get visited by the G-force about once a week. BTW her indoors says that if I do not stop reading SEOmoz Tips & Tricks at gone midnight, she will sue for divorce. Great work!
Submitted just yesterday, we are a bit concerned about contributing to divorce rates, but we're delighted to be considered essential reading!
I've taken a photo, chopped the person's head off in Photoshop and put mine on it. I think it's an improvement, but I'm wondering about the legal implications.
Undoubtedly, but I referred this one to Sarah.
And finally, one of the most intriguing question ever submitted, from one of the better SEOs in the business. I was a bit worried when I saw that Rob Kerry had submitted a query, as his SEO knowledge is pretty scary:
If SEOmoz had a pet, what type of animal would it be and what would you give it for a name?
This one had me stumped. Any suggestions?
We're constantly trying to streamline and scale the Q&A section, and there's definitely still room for improvement with speed of response (although, with Distilled on board, we're getting better). That said, I should really get this published and look at today's responses and submissions :)
I'm pretty sure I've been more than fondled by a search engine...if you get my drift.
The following conversations in the office were NSF the blog.
If you had a pet it would probably be a Transformer named Optimus Search, and it would turn into a Commador 64.
I think they should get some variety of mozsupial. nyuk nyuk nyuk.
Jane, are Kiwi's marsupial?
OK most people don't like the animal but it sort of fits. Since SEOs are usually called as ninjas or pirates, I can only have one animal that perfectly fits the criteria of a ninja and pirate that actually rhymes with Moz.... (drumroll).....
A mouse - and yes I would call the mouse Moz as a name. A mouse is a master of hiding (ninja) and loves the loot our food (pirate)
Sounds cheesy but hey... Life is cheesy sometimes.
I think what happens to some of us that have been long time members is that we learn so much and grow so fast that our lives get overwhelmingly busy very soon.
It's hard to keep up with your personal blog, you company blog, contribute to friends and networks' blogs, you hobby or side projects, keep up with the latest and greatest news through your feeds and most visited websites. R&D is crucial and great but you have to spend a good portion of your time actually making a living.
With all this, my partners and I keynote presentations, conduct seminars, publish magazine articles and more. There is also an aspect of managing your business, quality control, client success management, HR issues and wayyyyy more.
I attempt to read and visit SEOmoz as much as possible more often than other blogs but I just haven't figured out TIME TRAVEL yet.
I, and I assume others, always promise, plan and hope to contribute more to YOUmoz, comments and more but it can be difficult.
When my wife said she would divorce me because I was reading SEOmoz at gone midnight (ITS ALRIGHT DARLING IT IS ONLY 10.45PM!!) it was not because she was missing me. Rather it was because she is always asleep by midnight and she wants a read too.
BTW
I think your pet should be a SEOLion called Mozflippa.
It was one of the best laugh-out-loud moments I've ever had during Q&A :)
I have a client who knows enough SEO to get me into trouble. A little knowledge is far more dangerous than none at all.
Im an inhouse specialist. So coworkers like to pretend to be SEO gurus, dig around on the internet without the bread and butter knowledge (or consulting me), discover what someone/anyone says, send fire alarm emails to groups about SEO, what to do, that we are in great danger, and ... then I clean it all up. Oy Vay.A little knowledge is far more dangerous than none at all!
When I have a dog, her name will be Stella. Zoie is my cat.
You described the panic process wonderfully. It's astonishing how many people who will tell you not to believe everything (or anything) on the Internet will also jump up and down when they see a contradictory viewpoint in an out-of-the-way forum...
I probably fall into this client category - I'm just learning about SEO. But I dont' think I've ever gotten my SEO into trouble - and here's why.
1. Most of the time we agree, and it's great having someone on your side when you're trying to get things done.
2. He's earned my trust. If he says something isn't a big deal, he has the data and knowledge to explain why - rather than blowing me off as a newbie who doesn't know enough to play in the sandbox. And that encourages me to go to him first with thoughts and ideas.
How about a turtle for a pet. They are cute, right?
you suck for that picture :P
I am not the pet? I do things for beer. That should count for something.
#1 reason why I no longer do speaking engagements.
"What can is the most a website can get away with / how should a site serve different content to search engines than it does to humans without suffering any penalties?"
LMAO
Priceless reading. Thanks for making lunch fun today!
In my experience, I like running across these people. They know enough about SEO to realize that it's important for their business. Much easier to sell them than somebody who doesn't have the first clue about what SEO is.
As a bonus, you look extra good when you undo all of their bad ideas or get them reindexed.
ugh. i have a client who thinks he knows SEO but he spends all his time looking at analytics and competitors traffic, etc. we basically bill hourly based on the monthly rate clients are paying. last month he used up all his time by asking questions that needed to be researched, then answered via email or phone calls or various meetings. i had only a few hours left to do actual seo work that would benefit his site.
your pet should obviously be a monkey named "longtail".
I was thinking about the petA pig named "Blog"A Lynx named "Paid"A Retriever named "Page Rank" or "Search-bot" if it had puppies they could be "pup-links" or "No-Follows"A snake named "Black Hat" A worm named "Link Bait"A slug named "Sticky Site" A Raccoon named "Cloaker"
"BTW her indoors says that if I do not stop reading SEOmoz Tips & Tricks at gone midnight, she will sue for divorce. Great work!"
Haha, :D
Pet -
It has to be one of those robot dogs. Call it Gbot.
You can feed it whatever you want and it'll never know the difference.
A white Rabit named "Link"
I would hope that Link would breed me more "links" quickly!! lol
That way, they can always follow me home...
I seriously hope that that is a Matrix reference. I suspect it is.
It could be, but I was thinking about how fast bunnies multiply. If it was Link... It would definately make my life easier..
However, I decided to pick the color. And it white, for white hat, but I suppose it would work for a Matrix reference as well.
Re: If SEOmoz had a pet, what type of animal would it be and what would you give it for a name?
Answer: type="totally a dog" . . . cmon! name="mozster"
I think some of these happen when we realize that we haven't used our Q&A question for the month (or a couple of months) and then panic. Add alcohol, and the end result is never pretty.
I didn't know those were publicly viewable - thought it was premium only to ask or view.
OT -
Can anyone tell me the Q+A that Rand was referring to in this post https://www.seomoz.org/tips/view/129 ?
I can't seem to find it - I need it as ammo for our new redesign. Or if it was private I guess I could just ask the same question.
I think, since I can't find it either, that the question may have been private. All members can view questions but only PRO members can view the answers and follow-up questions / answers.
Yeah - sadly, that thread was private, but I can promise you the experience described therein was completely accurate and verified both Will and myself. Pretty amazing, right?
When I run into a site webmaster that understands SEO, it can be a blessing or a curse. Either they're "on to me" right away and aren't willing to work with me, or they have no clue - - and accommodate my every need.
If SEOmoz had a pet, it'd be a cat...just like Matt Cutts.
Nope, I'm allergic to cats.
An exact opposite of Cat would be Dog. But as Mert says below, a mouse can be cool. Cats (supposing that they represent the Big G) come chasing after mice and they love devouring the mice.
But I think the coolest would be baby Godzilla. So sad they stopped making them…
Perhaps a group effort is required.
https://www.mytechnologylawyer.com/
media spokesperson for tech lawyers
Hands down the SEOmoz pet would have to be a bird of paridise....that is if it can be tamed. I think these dudes are one of the coolest animals out there
When SEOmoz first came out with the premium content idea, I remember thinking the Q&A Section would be interesting, but it was still too early to tell (at least from the cursory level) how valuable it may be.
Not that I was questioning the experience of SEOmoz (not at all) - but not sure what type of questions would be asked/answered/honored.
Since signing up for a premium membership with the training program in August, I've browsed through this section a bit and definitely found it of value (haven't asked a question though). At the least, if something arises in client or personal work, I can browse through to see if someone else encountered something similar here.
My (long-winded) point is that it's not really spoken about in the benefits section when signing up for a premium account and perhaps it should be (I guess there could be reasons not to though).
Thank you for the comments! One thing we need to keep an eye on is scaling--making sure that the increase in PRO members can be met with people to staff Q&A.
I'm really glad you find the knowledge base of answered questions useful. There's some great content in there.
either a fainting goat or SEOHack.
Hahahahaha... ahh man, funniest thing I have read in ages. Kudos to the question submitter :)
I think the pet would have to be an Albatros as they can reach all corners of the globe. And I'd call him 'Little Sozzy' or simply 'Soz' or 'Sozzled' for short.
I think I am going to posting Q&A's when I have been drinking.
Edit: this wasn't meant as a reply to the above comment
its a good read....and moondog, i hope you are not working for clients after getting drunk
Some of the best idea's I've had have been when I was drunk. At least I think so... I cant usually remember them the next day but I've heard they were great!
Feel free; I promise not to answer them after I have been drinking ;)