Archive for September, 2008

How to Serve a Search Friendly Maintenance Page

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

When your website is down for maintenance or other outages, what should you return to search engine spiders that try to crawl your site?  Returning a “maintenance page” could cause problems if they take your maintenance page content and put that in the index.  You may suddenly lose all your rankings you worked hard to achieve.  Of course, when the search engines come back, they will find your actual content again, but your SEO rankings and traffic will suffer in the mean time.

There are lots of “wrong” ways to handle maintenance mode.  These include:

  1. Return a maintenance message using an HTTP 200 response code (gives the search engines new content for the page, which they may try to index, messing up your search rankings).
  2. Returning a 404 Not Found error (tells the search engine your page is gone — good by indexing!).
  3. Don’t respond at all (indicates your site is down — bad for users, but also tells search engines your site is unreliable and deserves less trust).  Of course, if your server or network are hard down, this is what will happen anyway, but if you can try to avoid this.
  4. Return a redirect to other content, whether 301, 302, JavaScript or meta refresh (confuses the search engine as to what the real content is, just like a maintenance page using a 200 response code).

So, what is the best response to return when your site is in maintenance mode?

You should use an HTTP 503 “Service Unavailable” response for all pages that cannot be served in their normal mode.   This tells the search engines to ignore this response, keep the current cache and indexing they have for that page, and come back later for a fresh copy.

Note that it is important to serve this response for all pages that are unavailable.

A PHP example of an HTTP 503 response is as follows:

<?php
header (’HTTP/1.1 503 Service Unavailable’);
?>
<html><head>
<title>Our website is temporarily unavailable</title>
</head><body>
Our apologies, our website is temporarily unavailable.  Please return in a few minutes.
<p>
Thank you!
</body></html>

By using the HTTP 503 “Service Unavailable” response code, you can avoid all sorts of issues with search engines reacting the wrong way, and preserve your SEO rankings over site outages.

John Erickson
www.leadqual.com

News: Display Advertising MySpace & Yahoo!

Tuesday, September 9th, 2008

News Corp owned Fox Interactive Media (FIM), which owns social MySpace, has surpassed Yahoo! as the owner of the largest share of display advertising in the US according to comScore data.

In June, total display ad views on FIM sites was over 56.8 million views which makes up 15.9% of all display advertising in the US. Yahoo! sites served up 53.1 billion display ads in the same month for a 14.2% share. Top display advertisers on FIM include University of Phoenix & Deutsche Telekom while the top Yahoo! display advertisers are Netflix & Nextag.

Concerns at Yahoo?
This new data shows a change from May when Yahoo had 15.9% share and FIM had a 13.5% share. With Yahoo!’s stocks dipping below $20, there has been many concerns regarding whether Yahoo! will be able to maintain or grow their advertising business. Yahoo! has been under much pressure to show shareholders that their advertising business will continue to grow and remain strong after turning away a $47.5 billion offer from Microsoft.

Good News MySpace
FIM’s growth in the advertising business is good news for their social networking property MySpace which makes up nearly all of FIM’s display advertising revenue. However there continues to be a struggle for advertisers to generate revenue off of social networking sites as these ad medium has generally had a poorer conversion rate compared to other online marketing tactics.

MySpace has reported that their fiscal fourth quarter revenue grew 23% year to year to $225 million due to search and advertising gains. They also noted that their ability to “hyper target” in delivering ads to specific group of consumers has contributed to this growth.

Display Advertising
Forrester projects that $2.78 billion will be spent by retailers this year. That would make display advertising over a third of all online marketing which is projected to be $8.2 billion according to Forrester. Search Engine marketing makes up $3.63 billion and email marketing is third at $1.25 billion.

AOL, Microsoft & Google sites round out the top 5 display advertisers in terms of total market share followed by well known web properties Facebook & Ebay.

Microsoft was the top display advertiser with 5.5 billion display ad views (1.7% share) largely due to its promotional campaign for Live Search. The University of Phoenix, an online university came in second with 4.7 billion ad views (1.4%) followed by Experian Interactive, United Airlines, Verizon, and AT&T all at 3.8-3.9 billion ad views (1.2%).

Paul Lee
Director of Online Marketing
LeadQual - SEM

Google Launches Chrome, Google Browser

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

Google has launched their own web browser today with the promise to better handle complex web programs and video rich content. Google had mailed a copy of a promotional comic book prematurely. The comic book can be found here. It was immediately followed by a post on Google’s blog site confirming the rumor that quickly spread across the web. The browser is called Google Chrome. It is considered “a fresh take on the browser”. Their plan is to make all of Chrome’s software code open to developers similar to Mozilla’s Firefox format.

Google Chrome Browser

This launch follows a recent update to Internet Explorer 8 as well as Firefox 3. It also follows a recent 3 year partnership extension between Mozilla and Google. With IE, Firefox, Safari, Opera being the main players, Google enters a very highly competitive space.

Google continues to produce different softwares and applications with the intention of having them fully integrated with one another. With office applications, desktop search, a new browser, email, google earth, Android among many other programs there is definitely a long term goal of providing an all-in-one fully integrated solution for their consumers. Most likely it will also be free of charge.

Call it another shot at Microsoft. Microsoft needs to figure out a strategy to counter this movement or they will continue to see their market share erode.

Thoughts? Please comment!

Paul Lee
Director of Online Marketing
LeadQual - SEM