LinkedIn Business Pages Get a New Cover

Our LinkedIn Cover Image

For many businesses moving away from Facebook, LinkedIn is becoming the place to be. Not only can you have an personal executive profile at LinkedIn, but your business can have a LinkedIn page too.

Business pages just got upgraded to a new cover look and so if you have a Business Page, you’ll want to login to LinkedIn and add a large graphic as your cover shot. Here’s our page so you can see what the cover looks like.

It is important to know that the image you create for LinkedIn must be 646 pixels wide and 220 pixels tall or it won’t upload. The image can actually be larger and when loaded LinkedIn will allow you to crop it, but must meet these minimum requirements.

The finished cover look is very Twitter-ish/Facebook-ish. I took elements of our company website banner for branding purposes, but you can use just about any image you would like.

With businesses looking to be social but socially productive, LinkedIn and the activity you find there definitely warrants another look. We provide LinkedIn status updates to your personal executive page. Check with us for more information or visit our services page online.

Google Placement and Article Marketing

This is a very interesting video done by Matt Cutts Google’s voice to my industry on the topic of article marketing. It is a must watch for all website owners.

In this video Matt Cutts specifically states that Google does not give weight to links from article marketing but specifically articles that are low quality meaning they are 200 to 275 words long and then have the wording changed by using article spinning software and syndicated out on hundreds of websites.

In other videos, Matt does say that articles created for sites in your industry that are high quality and that you have clearly worked hard on and sweated a bit over will give you link juice.

The bottom-line is that articles can still work for you for link creation but not typically in the way that many have done before and certainly not with volume “spammy” syndication.

Google Aggressively Takes on Website Optimization as Web Spam Part II

Continued from Monday.

3. Lists of locations containing city or county names with keywords at the bottom of a web page used as a tactic for location specific placement has not been disavowed by Google as recently as the middle of October.  Google specifically addresses this tactic as keyword stuffing. Read more on this from Google.

4. Google is asking you to turn other sites in that are spamming their network or not playing by their guidelines. Here’s the reporting link: https://www.google.com/webmasters/tools/spamreportform?hl=en. Considering many SEO tactics that would not be considered black hat at the time to now be grey hat, keyword stuffing or even web spam.

What I have found so very interesting with the recent changes and updates is that Google is now actively soliciting your help in turning in offending websites. By using an online form you can bring Google’s eyes onto your competitor’s website that has been practicing newly disavowed techniques to garner better placement. Although Google does not state that they will “smack down” a site you report, I surely would not want to be in their sites, would you?

Google Aggressively Takes on Website Optimization as Web Spam Part I

In the last thirty to sixty days Google has been changing and tweaking their algorithm and has also quietly been updating and changing its webmaster guidelines.  Here are just a few things that you should know just in case you missed them.

  1. New disavow link tool – not to be used lightly, this tool is to be used only after you have tried other removal protocols first, but using this tool will tell Google you do not want them to consider a particular site that is linking to you in their algorithm. More information from Google on this topic. Google continues to work to categorize inbound links weighting some heavier than others and penalizing website for certain types of links.
  2. Update to the webmaster guideline about links and other optimization tactics. Read the information from Google. What may be a concern to some is the use of CSS and possibly some uses of Spry widgets where some webmasters may have been hiding keyword dense text specifically for improved placement.

Come back on Wednesday to read the rest of the points in this article.