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Search Engine Optimization (SEO) Articles

This page provides a chronological list of all articles we've published on the site about search engine optimization (SEO). These articles usually discuss organic search engine marketing, whether it's news, tips, or approaches. While the focus is often on Google, we pay attention to other search engines such as Bing, Yahoo, and even Yelp and Amazon.

April 16, 2025 By Brandon Schwartz

What is the Difference Between Keywords and Topics?

What is the Difference Between Keywords and Topics?

When sitting down to plan an SEO campaign, a business owner might be inundated with technical jargon that does more to confuse than clarify. In our experience, some people use this technical jargon because it confuses people and dissuades them from asking questions. One such question is, “What is the difference between keywords and topics?”

When discussing SEO, it is common for “keywords” and “topics” to be used almost interchangeably in conversations about planning a campaign. But they are not interchangeable terms.

Defined simply, a “topic” is the subject matter you want a site to rank for, and a “keywords” is something a user would search for to find content related to that subject matter. One way to approach it is to use a taxonomy tree:

A simple taxonomy tree

Let us assume you have a website where the overarching theme is “transportation.” You want to discuss vehicles. Transportation qualifies as a topic, as does Vehicles. Underneath vehicles, you might have shared vehicles like planes and ferries, personal vehicles like cars and bicycles, and cargo vehicles like trains and trucks. You could draw the line here, and you could say “cars” are a keyword under the subtopic of Vehicles, which is under the broader topic of Transportation. Perhaps you do, but your website is going to have a very difficult time trying to rank for “cars” and “bicycles” as terms in their own right without more.

And that more comes from keywords about what essentially are the sub-subtopics of “cars” and “bicycles.” Particular brands of these, safety tips, tutorials on how to maintain or use them, uses, descriptors, and more all might be keywords related to the bigger sub-subtopic.

You use a taxonomy tree like the one above to map your topics. But a good keyword tool can help identify particular keywords people use when researching those topics. While the word you use for your topic may itself be a keyword, trying to rank for that word alone will be daunting because everyone else is competing against you. More people are searching for cars than they are for “how to recharge an air conditioner on a 2004 Honda Civic.” By having pages dedicated to specific keywords, you can show your website to be knowledgable on the bigger topics. And in turn, over time, you can rank for those topics generally.

But by keeping the distinction between topics and keywords in mind, you can create an organized website that ranks for a variety of keywords and improves over time.

Filed Under: Search Engine Optimization (SEO)

August 14, 2023 By Brandon Schwartz

Google to Reduce HowTo and FAQ Results

Google to Reduce HowTo and FAQ Results

Google announced last Tuesday that they will reduce the visibility of certain rich results from the search results. Specifically, Google is reducing the visibility of FAQ results and limiting HowTo results to only desktop devices.

Since 2019, website owners have been able to mark content on their websites as frequently asked questions (FAQ) to take advantage of the increased screen space given, as shown in the image above. Presumably, too many website owners have done this, and they have done so with content that is less than desirable. Not all FAQ results will be removed from Google. “[R]ich results will only be shown for well-known, authoritative government and health websites. For all other sites, this rich result will no longer be shown regularly. Sites may automatically be considered for this treatment depending on their eligibility.”

What this means in practice is unknown. Website operators wanting rich results have to improve their website’s quality and hope for the best. The update will be introduced globally.

Filed Under: Search Engine Optimization (SEO)

November 3, 2021 By Brandon Schwartz

November Spam Update By Google Confirmed

November Spam Update By Google Confirmed

Google’s Danny Sullivan, the company’s official liaison for webmasters, has recently confirmed a major spam update by Google. Google’s November spam update marks the fourth such update in 2021, with major updates happening over the summer. The search engine is in a constant push and pull with webmasters who try to game the search engine results page by promoting spam websites instead of useful content.

As part of our regular work to improve results, we've released a spam update to our systems. This November 2021 spam update should be fully rolled out within a week. We encourage sites to follow our best practices for Search: https://t.co/jK3ArQmTqT

— Google SearchLiaison (@searchliaison) November 3, 2021

Updates such as these are the methods Google usually uses to combat spam in the search results. Uncommonly, Google will take manual action against offenders, which can be more difficult for search engine optimization professionals to solve for. 2021 has seen Google become more sophisticated in the fight against spam. Back in April 2021, Google publicly revealed their creation of a spam fighting artificial intelligence, which the company boasted provided an “unprecedented potential to revolutionize” spam fighting.

“By combining our deep knowledge of spam with AI, last year we were able to build our very own spam-fighting AI that is incredibly effective at catching both known and new spam trends. For example, we have reduced sites with auto-generated and scraped content by more than 80% compared to a couple of years ago.”

Google

The format of spam can vary. Spam can be thin or copied content (called “scraped” in the industry).

It may also be content that’s “spun”. In other words, a computer program can copy someone else’s content, then put the words through a sort of thesaurus program to change the actual words while retaining the grammatical structure. Spun content reads like nonsense to a human being, but to some computer systems it can appear relevant to the original topic while seeming like it’s also brand new content.

Spam may also consist of auto-generated websites that piece together content from a variety of places to try to game the algorithm. More insidiously, spam may also consist of hacking into a legitimate website and either changing the content of the site, adding spam pages in other areas of the website unbeknownst to the site owner, or redirecting the site’s domain name to a target selected by the hacker.

While it’s still very early, we can tender a guess at what types of search queries the webspam team is paying attention to with Google’s November spam update. Throughout 2021, Google has paid particular attention to sensitive searches, such as those relating to conspiracy theories or medical information. It’s safe to assume that attention to those types of searches will continue.

Filed Under: Search Engine Optimization (SEO)

July 8, 2020 By Brandon Schwartz

How Page Loading Time Impacts Your Business

Most users can recall a time when they’ve been frustrated at how slow a website was loading. Website performance is impacted by a number of factors including the amount of content on a page, the size of any loaded images, the layout of the page, and even how physically distant the server hosting the website is from the person trying to access it. Site and page load speed is a highly important factor for user satisfaction, engagement, and search engine optimization. Here are some of the impacts of poor website performance, that extend beyond an individual getting slightly annoyed:

  • “1 second of load lag time would cost Amazon.com $1.6 billion in sales per year.” -Amazon
  • “When load times jump from 1 second to 4 seconds, conversions decline sharply. For every 1 second of improvement, we experience a 2% conversion increase.” –Walmart.
  • “A lag time of 400ms results in a decrease of 0.44% traffic – In real terms this amounts to 440 million abandoned sessions/month and a massive loss in advertising revenue for Google.” -Google. Google has become so obsessed with speed that they measure delays in the numbers of lives lost, i.e. by multiplying the time users have wasted by the number of users to determine how many lifetimes have been lost to poor engineering. Google further stated that an extra 0.5 seconds in each search page generation would cause traffic to drop by 20%.
  • 47% of users expect a page to load in 2 seconds or less.
  • 40% of users abandon a website that takes more than 3 seconds to load.
  • 79% of shoppers who are dissatisfied with a website’s performance are less likely to buy from the same website again.
  • 52% of online shoppers state that quick page loading time is important to their site loyalty.
  • A 1 second delay (or 3 seconds of waiting) decreases customer satisfaction by about 16%.
  • 44% of online shoppers will tell their friends about a bad experience online.

Some sources include:

  • Neil Patel
  • Econsultancy
  • Radware

Website performance is critical. The impact to your business extends far beyond minor annoyance.

Filed Under: Search Engine Optimization (SEO)

November 27, 2019 By Brandon Schwartz

Dot Org Registry Sold to Private Equity

Dot Org Registry Sold to Private Equity

In disappointing news, the registry for Dot Org (.org) domain names was sold to a private equity firm. Ethos Capital purchased purchased the non-profit Public Interest Registry (PIR). The “Chief Purpose Officer” at Ethos Capital, Nora Abusitta-Ouri, “has held a variety of positions at the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), including Senior Vice President, Development and Public Responsibility and Director of Engagement, International and Inter-Governmental Organizations” according to Ethos Capital’s website.

ICANN decided earlier this year that the cost of registering a .org domain name would no longer be capped. The previous contract, executed in 2013, barred the PIR from directly charging more than $8.25 per year per domain. Individual domain name resellers and registrars typically charged a markup, but the price cap was designed to make .org domain names accessible to small non-profits and organizations.

ICANN solicited comments for the proposed change. According to the results, 3,252 comments received by ICANN supported keeping the price cap. 57 of the received comments didn’t express an opinion either way, while only six supported lifting the restriction. A third appeared to voice support only sarcastically. In other words, fewer than 0.07% of commenters that that removing the price cap would be positive while more than 98% were opposed.

The new contract expired and around July, ICANN decided to remove the price cap. Now, Ethos Capital has purchased PIR.

We expect prices to increase, at the expense of non-profits.

Filed Under: Search Engine Optimization (SEO)

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