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Archive for the ‘Webmaster Central’ Category

How to find start-up ideas

25 Jul

Chris Dixon had an interesting post a while ago about how to find start-up ideas. The advice boiled down to keeping a spreadsheet of ideas and talking to lots of smart people (entrepreneurs, potential customers, VCs, people at big companies). It’s good advice. Paul Graham also wrote in 2008 about startup ideas he’d like to fund.

Here’s another way to come up with startup ideas: walk around your house or apartment, and look for “hot spots.” A hotspot can be an area of high information density, clutter, stress, disorganization, or any place that has a suboptimal solution. Then think about a web or cloud solution to that hot spot. Let’s take a look at a few examples:

Music CDs -> iTunes, Amazon MP3 store, doubleTwist, MP3tunes, etc.
Bookshelf -> Amazon, Kindle, iBooks
Stereo system -> Sonos, Squeezebox, Rhapsody, Pandora, last.fm, Spotify, Grooveshark, MOG, Rdio, etc.
External hard drives -> Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3), Pogoplug

Okay, those all seem simple or obvious, right? Let’s go a little deeper. What would you do with this pile of business cards?

pile of business cards

Pile of business cards -> CloudContacts

Here are a few more that come to mind:
Bank statements -> Mint
Photo Albums -> ScanCafe
Bathroom scale -> Withings
Pedometer -> Fitbit
Phone -> Google Voice, Twilio, Ribbit, Rebtel
Camera -> EyeFi
Stack of video games -> Steam, OnLive
DVD player -> Roku, Netflix Instant movies
Treadmill or Elliptical machine -> Nike+ shoe sensor, LoseIt! iPhone app, CardioTrainer app for Android, Fitbit
Pen -> Livescribe

All of these take a hotspot in your home and inject a cloud or web element to make life easier, more efficient or better. So what happens when you look at a pile of manuals, or receipts? Your alarm clock? Those “Learning Japanese” CDs? A stack of take-out menus? A stack of cookbooks? A hard drive full of MP3s that are disorganized? A hard drive that doesn’t have a back-up copy? An out-of-date programming book? A box full of videotapes? All those back issues of magazines? A blank wall, with no posters or other decoration? Stuff in your garage that you’ve been meaning to sell or give away? Your wallet?

Ideas are sitting all around where you live. If you have a small snag, irritation, or hotspot in your life, probably a lot of other people do too. You can make it easier to organize something (can you convert something physical to digital and store it in the cloud?). You can sell niche versions of a product (e.g. Threadless for T-shirts), you can let people make something that they couldn’t make before (CafePress for T-shirts, LuLu for books), you can pool people with similar interests (a blog like Craftzine, or a forum for book lovers or body builders), you can review products in a particular space, you can teach someone to do something. You can become a well-known expert in something and then sell your time or expertise as a consultant. You can make a free version of something useful or fun, then sell more features or consult on more involved cases. You can do meta versions of lots of these, e.g. Etsy is a marketplace for people who like to buy and sell custom crafted objects.

I’ll stop with a story. I have a friend at Google who is really good at noticing things that annoy him. While walking from his car to his desk in the morning, he can easily find six things that irritate him because they should be improved. I’m not recommending that you make yourself more irritable, but I am saying that if you notice all the times you run across something that can be improved, those are opportunities. And I think one of the easy methods of spotting start-up ideas is looking around where you live and how you spend your time. Find the hotspots in your own life and you might identify some great products or services to build.


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Flash Intro – New Style Intro

25 Jul

Simple fully vector flash intro, everything is scalable, editable, clips are individual
just drag and drop. ActionScript 2.0


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PNG Icons – Wooden Social Networking Icons

25 Jul

12 PNG Wooden Social Networking Icons

All icons are in Png file format. Four different sizes: 16px, 32px, 64px and 256px.


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PSD – Mail Feedback Form

25 Jul

Free download – PSD Mail Feedback Form


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Download High Resolution Facebook Application Icons

25 Jul

Here you can find total of 28 different Facebook application icons in high resolution .PNG and .SVG format.

You can download them in a single file thanks for to http://lopagof.deviantart.com/art/facebook-ui-icons-vector-90099876 (http://lopagof.deviantart.com/art/facebook-ui-icons-vector-90099876)


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15 Amazing Space Wallpapers recommended by WMT

25 Jul

If you are looking fresh look for your desktop, we can suggest you to
take a look at this Amazing Space Wallpapers.


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Office.com SEO: search engine-friendly URLs

25 Jul

Editor’s note: In our continuous effort to make this blog as compelling as possible to our large and diverse audience, we are expanding the scope of the Bing Webmaster Center blog. Starting with this post, we will host occasional posts from “guest bloggers” from within Microsoft who work on search or use search-related technologies in their daily jobs. They will offer the perspective of a user of search engine optimization (SEO) services (just like you!) rather than that of a search engine offering prescriptive SEO advice. Let us know what you think and what topics you’d like to see covered in future posts with a comment here. Thanks for being a member of the Bing Webmaster Center community!

Today’s guest blogger is Vincent Wehren, who led the SEO effort for the new Office.com. Office.com has grown to become the 30th largest site in the world, and has tens of millions of pages of indexed content. He’s been an SEO for three years and leads the International team responsible for improving content optimization, reducing content duplication in the index, and optimizing site search performance, among many other duties. I am very pleased to introduce him to the SEO community.

– Rick DeJarnette, Bing Webmaster Center team

***************************************************

Office.com is the companion website to Microsoft Office. With over 200 million unique visitors per month, 6 million content pages in 38 languages, and roughly 500 community contributors, the site offers product and support info as well as productivity content such as templates, images, clip art, and add-ons.

As part of building Office 2010, Office.com went through a complete redesign. In addition, the content management system and the server infrastructure behind it were also rebuilt to run on top of SharePoint 2010. As a side benefit, this major revamp also provided us with some opportunities to improve on our SEO capabilities.

Over a couple posts, I would like to share some of the SEO challenges we faced at Office.com and some of the decisions we made in the hope that you will find it useful for your site—big or small.

A new URL structure for our pages

Backed by the recommendations that came out of a site review that we did in collaboration with an external SEO vendor, we defined a global SEO strategy and list of priority items to go after. Our core focus during the development phase was on site architecture and other items that required code work to be done by our team of developers.

One of our top priorities was improving our URL structure to become more search engine-friendly. We already had a relatively flat folder structure—never more than one/two folder levels deep—but the URLs of our pages only contained a cryptic document ID, which made sense to our internal content management systems (CMS) but not to search engines (or users, for that matter). So, as part of the redesign, we wanted to have support for keyword-based, search-engine friendly URLs.

The motivation behind this is fairly straightforward:

  • People often copy and paste URLs verbatim into their blogs, forum comments, or web pages instead of using text.
  • At that point, the URL text becomes the anchor text for the link.
  • Anchor text is evaluated by the search engines to tell them more about the page the link is pointing to and keyword-focused.
  • Anchor text of inbound links is generally regarded as a top SEO ranking factor.
  • So, if all you have is a cryptic URL, this isn’t going to add any “keyword power” to your page, but using a keyword-based URL will give you the additional “keyword power” you need to help your page rank for the included terms.

But that’s not really all:

  • The URL itself is also very likely a part of the search engine’s ranking equation, so having meaningful keyword-focused text helps with this too.
  • Finally, if the URL matches the search terms for a given query, that part of the URL will be bolded in the results page, which can help increase click-though and traffic to your page.

The solution

With a need to scale for hundreds of thousands of articles and a large number of languages, we decided to simply re-use the existing page title and algorithmically build the display URL. We created something that loosely works as follows and which doesn’t differ a whole lot from what some other content management systems or blogging software solutions do:

  1. Start with the document title.
  2. Replace spaces and other non-boundary tokens (such as apostrophes, underscores, etc.) with hyphens.
  3. Normalize any accented/extended characters to plain ASCII letters.
  4. Make everything lowercase.
  5. Append the internal document ID to always ensure a unique URL regardless of title.

For example, following the above rules, the article “Overview of XML in Excel” in English now can be found at http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/excel-help/overview-of-xml-in-excel-HA010206396.aspx.

On the other hand, our users in Mexico will find the article here: http://office.microsoft.com/es-mx/excel-help/informacion-general-sobre-xml-en-excel-HA010206396.aspx.

URL length and stop words

What we did not implement for Office.com but you may want to consider for your situation is to limit the number of keywords in the URL or remove stop words from it.

The argument is that too many keywords dilute the value of each individual keyword and that long URLs receive fewer click-throughs.

We explicitly did not remove stop words because this gets a lot more involved for the large number of languages we support. Also, a lot of our pages are around key terms that in other contexts would qualify as stop words. A good example would be the title such as “What-if scenario” or “If function” in Excel, where the stop words “what” and “if” are actually the most significant, so stripping them out simply didn’t make sense for us.

Also, search engines have started to improve the way they surface the page URL in the search results, making the click-through argument somewhat less of a concern.

Exceptions to our keyword-based URL strategy

There are cases where we wanted to cement the folder (or what we call a “sub web”) name as the ultimate display URL for the page. In those cases we do not expand the page title but just promote the folder as the canonical URL. An example would be the default page of a specific product subfolder such as http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/access-help/. This also has the advantage that if the document ID changes for the index page of this folder, we do not have to redirect from the old page to the new page which we had to do in the past.

We also didn’t end up taking the keyword-based approach for non-Latin based character sets, such as for our Japanese, Russian, Arabic, or Hindi sites—not because this wasn’t feasible technically, but mostly because of the fact that there was still sufficient ambiguity around how to best handle URLs in these languages for users, browsers, and search engines alike. However, this is definitely something we would like to explore further in the future.

Fewer URL parameters

In addition to the keyword-based URLs, there was also a push to reduce the use of query parameters and have our URLs be more static overall. Although we didn’t manage to remove all dynamic parameters (some of them are still meaningful, as with some click tracking scenarios), we made huge strides in that direction. Not only does that make it easier for search engines to determine the “primary” URL for a resource (there should preferably only ever be one), but it also helped to reduce the URL surface which search engines have to spend time crawling, processing, de-duping, etc., allowing them to spend more time on other pages.

Redirection of the old-style URLs to new URLs and the canonical tag

When making large-scale URL changes on a site that has earned numerous inbound links in the wild, you should redirect the old URLs to the new ones using a 301 redirect.

The 301 redirect makes sure that all ranking power of the old link is concentrated in the new URL. It also helps avoid content duplication problems if both the old and new URL still “work”—which is the case for Office.com.

In addition, you could consider backing up this redirect strategy with the rel=”canonical” tag, which is starting to enjoy more and more support from the search engines. The canonical tag tells search engines the preferred URL of the page if there are multiple URLs for the page.

For Office.com, we planned to use both 301 redirects and the canonical tag, although we will start doing the full redirection only in a few weeks. Also, we are exclusively advertising the new URLs in our XML Sitemaps—but more about our Sitemap strategy in a later post!

What have you planned for? Are you thinking about search engine, keyword-based friendly URLs for your site?

If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions, feel free to post them in our SEM forum. Up next: Office.com Sitemaps strategy.

– Vincent Wehren, Lead Engineer, Office.com International Site & Services


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A new beginning: Bing Webmaster Tools

25 Jul

Today, we’re announcing the release of the updated Bing Webmaster Tools. After the Bing launch, we reached out to the webmaster and SEO communities to see how we could improve the webmaster tools. Your feedback was very consistent: you wanted more transparency to see how Bing crawls and indexes your sites, more control over your content in the Bing Index, and more information to help you optimize your sites for Bing.

So what’s new in the updated Bing Webmaster Tools? Everything. With your feedback in mind, the Bing Webmaster Team decided to hit the reset button and rebuild the tools from the ground up.

The redesigned Bing Webmaster Tools provide you a simplified, more intuitive experience focused on three key areas: crawl, index and traffic. New features, such as Index Explorer and Submit URLs, provide a more comprehensive view as well as better control over how Bing crawls and indexes your sites. Index Explorer gives you unprecedented access to browse through the Bing index in order to verify which of your directories and pages have been included. Submit URLs gives you the ability to signal which URLs Bing should add to the index. Other new features include: Crawl Issues to view details on redirects, malware, and exclusions encountered while crawling sites; and Block URLs to prevent specific URLs from appearing in Bing search engine results pages. In addition, the new tools take advantage of Microsoft Silverlight 4 to deliver rich charting functionality that will help you quickly analyze up to six months of crawling, indexing, and traffic data. That means more transparency and more control to help you make decisions, which optimize your sites for Bing.

We have good news for all the veteran users of the Bing Webmaster Tools. Your existing Webmaster Center accounts have been automatically upgraded to the new tools. This means that starting today, you’re already a registered user of the new Bing Webmaster Tools. There’s no need to create a new account, change ownership verification codes, or re-enter site data. If you don’t have a current account, you can easily sign-up and register your sites to begin using the new tools.

This is only the beginning; we have many more features planned for release in the coming months. These are your tools, so send us your feedback, suggestions, and questions to help guide how the tools evolve. As always, you are encouraged to comment here in the blog or post your feedback and questions to the Bing Webmaster Tools & Feature Requests forum.

– Anthony M Garcia, Senior Product Manager, Bing Webmaster Tools

 


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[POLL] Help me pick my next 30-day challenge!

07 Jul

This month I made my 30 day challenge be “Don’t respond to email after 10 p.m.” I’ve done very well overall on this challenge, and I like the results a lot. I’ll probably try to keep up this behavior.

Now I need to pick my next challenge. I read through the 350+ suggestions and comments that people wrote, and put together a poll. Please vote below for the one thing you think I should try to do for 30 days.

Note: There is a poll embedded within this post, please visit the site to participate in this post’s poll.

I can’t promise that I’ll do each item, but looking back over the last year, I have had good success at doing the things from the first 30 day challenge poll.


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Webspam projects in 2010?

07 Jul

About a year and a half ago, I asked for suggestions for webspam projects for 2009. The feedback that we got was extremely helpful. It’s almost exactly the middle of 2010, so it seemed like a good time to ask again: what projects do you think webspam should work on in 2010 and beyond?

Here’s the instructions from an earlier post:

Based on your experiences, close your eyes and think about what area(s) you wish Google would work on. You probably want to think about it for a while without viewing other people’s comments, and I’m not going to mention any specific area that would bias you; I want people to independently consider what they think Google should work on to decrease webspam in the next six months to a year.

Once you’ve come up with the idea(s) that you think are most pressing, please add a constructive comment. I don’t want individual sites called out or much discussion; just chime in once with what you’d like to see Google work on in webspam.

Add your suggestion below, and thanks!


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