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August, 2011:

Are Squidoo Tag Pages Dead, Or Just Different?

Katinka has raised some important interlinking questions about how recent changes at Squidoo are impacting SEO of our lenses. We don't have all the answers -- are these changes temporary or permanent? -- but I've been pondering interlinking alternatives.

One important method of interlinking on Squidoo is, or was, Squidoo tags.

Fluff explained how Squidoo tag pages work on his SquidUtils blog back in '09. Squidoo tags sit in our lens sidebar and point to a tags page. For example, here's Squidoo's lenses on pirate costumes. That tags page lists all the lenses sharing that tag, including a brief excerpt of the introduction of each lens. If all the lenses are relevant to a topic, and their introduction text reinforces that topic, then, presumably, the tags page acts as a relevant backlink.  But if it's an orphaned tag shared by few or no other lenses, then the tag page may not matter much: it looks really empty, and I don't see much relevant link juice.

In the past, I've occasionally seen Squidoo tag pages appear in Google search results.

But now...

(more...)

Check Your Article in Google's Cache

Do you know what Google knows of your article?

The result may surprise you.

Take the URL for your article, hub or lens and Google the following:

cache:http://www.squidoo.com/yourlens

If you see spinny "loading" icons, that means Google doesn't have that part of your page indexed. Google will only send search traffic based on the content it can see and index.

Other places you can check:

  • Webconfs' Spider Simulator, especially useful to see what links are crawlable on your page
  • The Internet Archive: does it have a copy of your page yet? If it does, search engines most certainly do.

When Squidoo (or any) website is glitching...

We've endured about two weeks of connection timeouts and edits that refuse to take. You may want to give up entirely and work on some other site. But if you've got work on Squidoo that can't wait, get in the habit of this simple, VITAL technique:

Right before hitting the "Save" or "Post" button on a field of text, ALWAYS click Control-A (Command-A on Mac) to Select All, then Control-C (Command-C) to copy the contents to the clipboard.

That way, no matter what, you've saved what you just wrote and can copy it to a text document or try again. It's an imperfect solution -- and I advise working in a text document for longer chunks of text and pasting them across -- but it will save you at least a little screaming.

Traffic Trick: Give Something

You know the trick: Free Prize inside. Give people something. Rewarding visitors encourages clicks (we're programmed to reciprocate), and it gives them a reason to read your article. Besides, the internet was built on free stuff  -- commercial enterprise was actually illegal on the internet until relatively recently -- and it still grows largely based on free stuff: our content, our ideas, our comments, which are an indirect return for the massive infrastructure invisibly keeping the net running.

But beyond that. Doing something for customers is a marketing trick used by everyone from the IWearYourShirt guys to scantily-clad people in front of web cams. So many newbies ask, "Why aren't I getting any traffic?" When the answer is, "Why SHOULD traffic show up on your doorstep?" What creative, original thing have you done to bring that traffic? And what are you giving your visitors? You should ask yourself this question with every page for which you want traffic: what are you giving people they can't get anywhere else?

I have a good online friend who's just turned thirty. To celebrate being 30, she created this website: Experiment30.  For the next year, she's going to be putting up polls inviting the internet to tell her what to do. Crazy stuff. Silly stuff. Not R-rated stuff, mind, but just...well, go see what her first poll asks.  She'll be posting photos or results as she acts out whatever people tell her to do.

Will she get visitors? No guarantees. She's not doing it to get lots of traffic. She doesn't know squat about SEO. She has no idea I'm posting this as a signal boost. But it's an interesting experiment. It's also authentic. She's just doing it....because why not?

Happy birthday, you nut. Good luck.

Woo Hoo, Another "Squidoo Surprise"!

Hopefully this is a bug and not a feature.

Katinka / Spirituality reports in a SquidU post that the My Lenses / Featured Lenses modules which many of us use to inter-link our lenses are no longer indexed by Google. This would prevent duplicate content from showing up -- namely, the 150 character excerpt of each lens' introduction -- but also severs cross-links, hampering SEO.

You can verify the missing modules for yourself, as I just did, by Googling the following on a lens with a Featured Lenses module:

cache:http://www.squidoo.com/yourlens

replacing the URL above with a lens URL. This will show you exactly what part of the page Google has indexed and knows about. At the moment, the Featured Lenses module just isn't there.

We don't yet know whether this is a deliberate Squidoo design change or a bug introduced during recent upgrades. Katinka's passed this news onto Fluff, who isn't a Squidoo employee, but sometimes works with Squidoo on a volunteer basis to bug hunt.

So for now, we sit tight.

The reason this matters is that Featured Lenses / My Lenses modules were easy ways to cross-link lenses, allowing search engines to find new pages on Squidoo very quickly through links on existing pages. These cross-links were backlinks, hopefully backlinks from related content to related content, if you used them to point to lenses in the same niche / topic.

IF -- big if -- this is a new, permanent "feature," it means we'll have to do yet another workaround, hand-coding cross links to other related content so that we don't lose backlinks. The basic HTML code for doing this, which most of you know, is:

<a href="http://www.squidoo.com/example">Clickable text goes here</a>

I will also shameless plug some handy tutorials I've written, my old Make a Fancy Table of Contents tutorial for making compact, elegant-looking navigation bars and menus, and the Fancy Featured Lenses module trick I've ben using lately for lensographies such as my  index of all my graphics tutorials.

Or... once, long ago, when the Featured Lenses Module only let us enter 5 modules and displayed its contents in a random order rather than letting us pick the order of lenses, I figured out how to mimic the Featured Lenses Module's appearance precisely in a text module.

So there's several alternatives for cross-linking purposes. And as Katinka noted, cross-linking through Squidoo tags still works.

Let's sit tight for a few days until we know for sure whether this change is permanent, before we revamp all our lenses to address the problem.