FlyPosting

Search engine marketing and optimisation notes designed to help get the most from your web site traffic building.

Monday, 18 August 2008

Soup tasters

We've invited existing subscribers to pass comment on FlySoup's web analytics service in order to give potential subscribers the confidence to take the plunge and sign up for a trial. You'll find a growing list of positive feedback below.

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4 Comments:

At 18 August 2008 16:26 , Anonymous hughie phillips said...

Flysoup has fast become an invaluable new business tool for tracking which organisations have been looking at what on our website.
I would highly recommend it to anybody looking to join.

 
At 18 August 2008 16:27 , Anonymous hughie phillips said...

This post has been removed by a blog administrator.

 
At 18 August 2008 16:56 , Anonymous Adam Whipps said...

I have been using Flysoup for nearly 3 years and refer to it throughout the working day for live stats and to track visitor navigation. It is an invaluable business tool for e-commerce sites and provides the depth of data required to support decision making.

 
At 20 August 2008 09:02 , Blogger martin said...

I love hanging around my desk waiting to see who comes into my web. Very useful!

 

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Wednesday, 6 August 2008

All I'm seeing is the default page!

This is a follow up to Show me some ID in which I wrote about how to get the full path to show up in your latest page views report when your site content is dynamically generated.



What I didn't cover was a quirk relating to a site's index page. In FlySoup this defaults to, well... 'default', regardless of any query string.

So what happens if your dynamic content is based off a page called index.php. All you see is 'default page'. Not particularly useful.

Here's the work around.

As before, you will need to make a small adjustment to the tracking script.

In the tracking script, change
wa_pageName=location.pathname; // you can customize the page name here

to read
wa_pageName=' '+location.pathname+location.search;

In the changed line, you can leave just a space between the two single quotes, or you can make it 'your site name' or 'Page ' or something similar. Whatever you put will precede the page name and query string.

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Monday, 4 August 2008

Cuil sounds Cool

Cuil, pronounced Cool, is already the biggest search engine on the web and it only launched a week ago.

It aims to index the whole web and at the time of writing had amassed more than 120 billion web pages - 3 times the number of any other search engine, including Google.

It also sets out to do things differently, going beyond link analysis and traffic ranking to assess the context of each page and the concepts behind each query and organising search results into category groups that aid the searcher in refining their query.

Cuil offers richer and more easily organised results pages with tabbed clarification of your search query, associated imagery and a magazine style layout for easier reading.

It also majors on its respect for the privacy of the searcher and doesn't keep any personally identifiable information on searchers and their search histories.

Inevitably there were a few glitches at launch. I noticed some mismatch between entries and their associated imagery on sites we look after but on the whole found Cuil's approach refreshing. I suspect it's going to give the big three (MSN, Yahoo and Google) serious competition.

"The web continues to grow at a fantastic rate and other search engines are unable to keep up with it," says CEO and co-founder Tom Costello. And he should know; his partner in business and life is Anna Patterson. Ms. Patterson is best known for her work at Google, where she was architect of the company's large search index and led a Web page ranking team. Together with Russell Power, also ex Google, they have re-written the rule book in order to allow users to explore the internet more fully and giving searchers access to an increasingly Long Tail.

In spite of launch day jitters, Cuil was able to beat Google in a key metric that measures relevancy of search results: the amount of time a user spends on the site after being referred to by a search engine. Here are the results for the last three days of July:

Search engine average minutes on site:

Cuil 9.65
Google 9.37
yahoo 8.57

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Sunday, 3 August 2008

Short piece on the Long Tail



The Long Tail
How endless choice is creating unlimited demand. Chris Anderson

Back in 2006 Chris Anderson wrote The Long Tail - a history of the 'hit', a definition of the Long Tail, a look at the businesses already taking advantage of it and some predictions about the future effects of the Long Tail.

If you haven't come across the term before, here's a brief explanation.

Hit lists have been around for decades. Marketing focus has traditionally been on the big hits. That's where the volume and the money is. Well, that's where it was.
There will always be top ten listings and somebody has to come first. But today, the front runners aren't packing quite the punch they once did. And the expertise involved in creating, picking and promoting hits is increasingly redundant.

Today, the internet has largely removed geography and the physical storage of inventory from the equation while at the same time introducing even greater levels of choice. Brands still fight for shelf space on retailers shelves, but retailers on the internet have no concerns about the size of their inventory. They don't have to worry about the likely popularity of an individual line based on the size of their real-world cachement area or the physical limits of their expensive high street retail space. Global reach has made niche offerings that couldn't be supported within a physical location suddenly significant.

Six major themes emerge from the book:
1 In any sector, there are more niche goods/services than 'hits'.
2 The cost of accessing these niches has fallen dramatically.
3 Massive choice needs filtering to make sense of it all.
4 With expanded choice and granular search, the niche becomes more popular than the mainstream. All the niches adds up to more than all the hits.
5 Real demand is made transparent without being hidden behind artificial scarcity brought about by lack of information, shelfspace or distribution problems.

It's a quick and easy read and all the more powerful for that. Highly recommended. Just click on the link at the top of the post to buy it from Amazon.

But what if you aren't a web retailer with a vast virtual inventory? What if you are simply promoting a service through your web site? Well the Long Tail effect will still be evident. The distribution curve of the terms used to find your site will probably show that your top ten terms account for less than 20% of all search driven visits to your site. And if they count for more than 30% then you are almost certainly missing out on your fair share of niche traffic.

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Wednesday, 30 July 2008

The Knol edge

This is not a piece about what it takes to become a black cab driver in London. For that you need something like taxiknowledge.


Instead this is about Google's new authoring tool Knol - half way between a blog and a wiki with ultimate control of the content held by the author initiating the piece. It's causing something of a stir in SEO circles as there appears to be some evidence that Google is favouring Knol pages over more established web pages offering the same content. Whether this is just a short term setting of the algorithms to give their fledgling service the best launch, or whether it is a longer term bias on Google's part, one thing is clear - a little bit of Knol edge could go a long way.

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Friday, 25 July 2008

Reviewing our reviews

We've stuck our neck out a bit and asked people that have recently signed up for the free reviews of their web site to give us feedback about the reports they received.

So watch this space.

It's a brave move in the sense that our reports pull no punches. However, our motivation has always been to highlight the opportunity rather than criticise the current position.

If you think it would be useful to get an opinion about what you could do on your own site from the perspective of SEO or Competitive positioning please follow the links to sign up for an assessment.

And when we've given our view, come back here and give us yours.

2 Comments:

At 08 August 2008 11:29 , Blogger myessentialhealth said...

David
Thank you so much for my Search Engine Optimisation Report. I new I needed to work on my websites optimisation but your report was a revelation, it’s a wonder that I have got any business at all.

Considering your report was free with no obligation, I was impressed with depth of the help and advice it provided, and especially that I could start to improve my websites optimisation immediately myself.

I would like to say that your report is worth every penny, but I can’t because it hasen’t cost me a penny, so 10 out of 10 for value for money!

I don’t care who you are, or how big you are, if you have a website have one of David’s ‘Search Engine Optimisation Reports’ it’s a no brainer.

Once again David many thanks for the report and your time.

Kind regards

William Norton
Essential Health Direct
www.myessentialhealth.co.uk

 
At 08 August 2008 16:23 , Blogger Mark said...

The application of Fly Soup to the M-A-D-E website and the resulting analysis has transformed the usefulness of the site. The SEO results are superb. We shall be continuing the service full time and extending it to our other websites,

Mark Andrews,
managing Director,
M-A-D-E Ltd.

 

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Wednesday, 23 July 2008

Show me some id

Dynamically generated web pages will have a url containing a query string that might look something like this:


www.test.com/somedirectory/some.php?id=41&pageno=1


Taking the example shown above, the default set-up for the FlySoup tracking code will show some.php as the page visited in your stats report.

What most subscribers with dynamic/content managed sites will want to know is the specific id and page number in order that a more granular interpretation of the stats is possible.

location.search will do this for you.

To get the full query string make the following change in the tracking script:

look for and change wa_pageName=location.pathname; // you can customize the page name here

to read wa_pageName=location.pathname+location.search;

In an ideal world, your web designers would also use URL rewriting to provide a more intuitive URL so that as well as the script returning the full query string it does so in plain English rather than id=41&pageno=1.

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Find out more

To find out more about FlySoup or for an informal conversation about your web site, please call David Hughes on: +44 20 7391 9499

Hard copy correspondence should be sent to:
68 Grafton Way,
London
W1T 5DS

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