Social media and SEO: compatible? Event review.

I just came from another great Third Tuesday Calgary event. This time we had Jeff Nelson of Anduro Marketing talking about social media and SEO. Specifically, does engaging in social media help your SEO efforts? Below are some notes from the talk.
  • One of the main arguments was that social media is NOT good for SEO because most of the social networking sites have a nofollow attribute in links.
  • Jeff used seo-browser.com tool to parse a few social media sites including Twitter, Wikipedia, Youtube, etc.
  • Results showed that neither Twitter nor Wikipedia pass the Google juice to external pages, therefore these sites were almost useless in contributing to SEO efforts.
  • I sincerely believed that Twitter passes the link to your site in the right-hand sidebar (where it talks about the user). The reason for this was that I've seen a link count through SEOmoz's OpenSiteExplorer.org.
  • On the other hand, YouTube had one link that actually lead to a site and passed authority (the link to your site in YouTube channel profile). Unfortunately you're not able to customize the anchor text.
  • Jeff briefly talked about three characteristics of a link: anchor text, whether it passes the value (not nofollow), and the context (text content surrounding the link).
  • Then Jeff went into a bit of history of when social media started to matter for SEO. He showed a list of links to resources talking about it starting in 2006. One of the articles by Rand Fishkin was the most valuable.
  • Finally, Jeff got into discussing the three reasons to use social media to help your SEO: brand promotion, link bait, and viral distribution. Meaning that social media is not the best friend of SEO but can be a good buddy to hang out with sometimes.
    • brand promotion: although you're not getting tons of link value from social networks, it's definitely worth participating in social media for the reason of promoting your brand with the relevant audiences.
    • link bait: or developing valuable content on your site (in form of a blog post most often) that others will link back to. The emphasis is on the value of that content. Just writing frequent articles will not help. Make then infrequent, but super valuable. Here's an article Jeff shared that'll help you with creating such content.
    • viral distribution: somewhat related to link bait, yet a separate reason. The goal here is to create valuable content and ensure that it's as simple as possible to pass along. Jeff gave a couple of examples of principles behind successful viral distribution. Then, we all watched "will it blend" as a great example of a viral campaign.
  • Here's a couple of great links on the topic Jeff shared:
I hope this summary of key points helps those who missed the event and those of you who are not in Calgary. Feel free to comment on other ways you know of where social media can be helpful in reaching your SEO objectives. Here's the link to a copy of Jeff's presentation at SlideShare.net
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7 Responses to “Social media and SEO: compatible? Event review.”

  1. Zagoumenov Says:

    Something on the topic of link bait, just ran across a resource for title generation for link bait articles. Very funny: http://linkbaitgenerator.com/

  2. Shannon Bowen-Kelsick (sbk) Says:

    Thanks for summarizing the session and providing the links. Jeff did say he was going to share his presentation - please post it if you get it.

    Now we need to prove or disprove the idea that your Twitter profile's website is a regular link that affects SEO, or is a nofollow..... maybe a test for MythBusters?

  3. Zagoumenov Says:

    Shannon! Thanks for the comment! As for the Twitter link, it actually IS a nofollow, and therefore, according to Jeff, is not really helpful for your SEO "karma".

    However, I've been witnessing an interesting notion: Google stopped worrying about nofollow attributes as SEOs started to abuse it. They call it "pagerank sculpting", which used to work: http://www.seomoz.org/blog/pagerank-sculpting-with-nofollow-still-works.

    ... and the argument is that it doesn't work any more: http://hackadelic.com/seo-page-rank-sculpting-my-ass-nofollow-meta-game-over.

    As all other things, there was an opportunity, people started abusing it, Google noticed and change the rules. So, the best way to get long-term results with SEO is to:
    1. produce quality content,
    2. let others link back to you,
    3. participate by sharing insights,
    4. and be yourself while doing it.

  4. Nike Max TN Says:

    very good!

  5. Zagoumenov Says:

    Here's another proof of nofollow link value: http://seo-tools.suite101.com/article.cfm/nofollow-links-affect-google-search-engine-ranking

  6. Amber Hunter Says:

    Hi, Alex:

    Enjoyed your article. You left a comment earlier today on my article about NoFollow links. You might want to repost with the correct link - the one you'd left in your comment is broken. There's no way for me to edit your comment, but I can delete the first post if you'd like to leave a second with the correct link.

    Look forward to reading more on your site!

  7. Zagoumenov Says:

    Amber, thanks a bunch for stopping by. Just checked out WebLiberate. What an awesome blog!

    I just submitted another comment on the page about nofollow. It's virtually the same but with a bit.ly shortened link. Please delete the version with the long / broken link.

    I look forward to staying in touch!

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