SEO / SEM Glossary
Common Internet Marketing Terms
The following are some unsolicited comments from our clients.
above the fold: In
traditional newspaper advertising this meant the top portion of the paper. In
Internet marketing (web and email) it means the visible portion of the display
prior to scrolling.
absolute link: A link which shows the full URL of the page
being linked to. Some links only show relative link paths instead of the entire
URL in the href tag. Due to hijacking issues it is typically preferred to
use absolute links over relative links.
Example absolute link
<a href="http://Tech-Line.com/contact.htm">Contact Us</a>
Example relative link
<a href="../contact.htm">Contact Us</a>
AdSense: G
AdWords: W
affiliate marketing: Affiliate marketing is a process of
revenue sharing that allows merchants to duplicate sales efforts by enlisting
other web sites as a type of outside sales force. The affiliate earns
commissions for selling the merchants goods or services.
algorithm: The technology that a search engine uses to
deliver results to a query. Search engines utilize several algorithms in tandem
to deliver a page of search results or keyword-targeted search ads.
analytics: The capturing of data which allows you to track
your page views, user paths, and conversion statistics.
anchor text: The clickable text part of a hyperlink. The
text usually gives visitors or search engines important information on what the
page being linked to is about.
banner blindness: Internet users over the years have learned
to ignore banner advertising. Actual informative text ads have become much more
effective.
black hat tactics: The practice of trying to gain ranking by
tricking or cheating the search engines. This is a very bad practice that can
not only drop you from the engines but in some cases can lead to litigation.
Backlinks: All the links to a specific web page. Also called
"inbound links".
blog: An online journal of periodically updated data. Many
blogs archive and categorize information in addition to providing a feed that
allows simple user interaction like leaving comments.
broken link: A link from your website that leads to a
page-not-found result. This will cost your sites page ranking.
click through rate (CTR): The rate (expressed in a
percentage) at which users click on an ad. This is calculated by dividing the
total number of clicks by the total number of ad impressions. CTR is an
important metric for Internet marketers to measure the performance of an ad
campaign.
content network: A group of Web sites that agree to show ads
on their site, served by an ad network, in exchange for a share of the revenue
generated by those ads. For example: Google AdSense or the Yahoo Publisher
Network.
contextual advertising: Advertising that is targeted to a
Web page based on the page's content, keywords, or category. Ads in most content
networks are targeted contextually.
conversion: A conversion is reached when a desired goal is
completed. That can be a sale, a subscription or a data collection form
submission.
cost per action (CPA): A form of advertising where payment
is dependent upon an action that a user performs as a result of the ad. The
action could be making a purchase, signing up for a newsletter, or asking for a
follow-up call. An advertiser pays a set fee to the publisher based on the
number of visitors who take action. Many affiliate programs use the CPA model.
cost per click (CPC): Also called Pay per Click (PPC). A
performance-based advertising model where the advertiser pays a set fee for
every click on an ad. The majority of text ads sold by search engines are billed
under the CPC model.
cost per thousand (CPM): An ad model that charges
advertisers every time an ad is displayed to a user, whether the user clicks on
the ad or not. The fee is based on every 1,000 ad impressions (M is the Roman
numeral for 1,000). Most display ads, such as banner ads, are sold by CPM.
dead link: See broken link.
geo-targeting: Delivery of ads specific to the geographic
location of the searcher. Geo-targeting allows the advertiser to specify where
ads will or won't be shown based on the searcher's location, enabling more
localized and personalized results.
Googlebot: Google uses several user-agents to crawl and
index content in the Google.com search engine. Googlebot describes all Google
spiders. All Google bots begin with "Googlebot"; for example, Googlebot-Mobile:
crawls pages for Google’s mobile index; Googlebot-Image: crawls pages for
Google’s image index.
inbound link: An inbound link is an hyperlink to a
particular Web page from an outside site, bringing traffic to that Web page.
Inbound links are an important element that most search engine algorithms use to
measure the popularity of a Web page.
invisible web: A term that refers to the vast amount of
information on the web that isn't indexed by search engines. Coined in 1994 by
Dr. Jill Ellsworth.
keyword: A word or phrase entered into a search engine in an
effort to get the search engine to return matching and relevant results. Many
Web sites offer advertising targeted by keywords, so an ad will only show when a
specific keyword is entered.
link bait: Editorial content, often sensational in nature,
posted on a Web page and submitted to social media sites in hopes of building
inbound links from other sites.
link building: The process of getting quality Web sites to
link to your Web site, in order to improve search engine rankings. Link building
techniques can include buying links, reciprocal linking, or entering barter
arrangements.
meta tags: Information placed in the HTML header of a Web
page, providing information that is not visible to browsers, but can be used in
varying degrees by search engines to index a page. Common meta tags used in
search engine marketing are title, description, and keyword tags.
organic search results: Unpaid listings are called the
organic search results. Organic search results are organized by relevancy, which
is largely determined using link data, page content, usage data, and domain
history and trust related data. Most clicks on search results (60 to 80%) are on
the organic search results.
pay per click (PPC): See Cost per Click (CPC).
quality score: A score assigned by search engines that is
calculated by measuring an ad's click-through rate, analyzing the relevance of
the landing page, and considering other factors used to determine the quality of
a site and reward those of higher quality with top placement and lower bid
requirements. Some factors that make up a quality score are historical keyword
performance, the quality of an ad's landing page, and other undisclosed
attributes. All of the major search engines now use some form of quality score
in their search ad algorithm.
return on investment (ROI): The amount of money an
advertiser earns from their ads compared to the amount of money the advertiser
spends on their ads.
search advertising: Also called Paid Search. An advertiser
bids for the chance to have their ad display when a user searches for a given
keyword. These are usually text ads, which are displayed above or to the right
of the algorithmic (organic) search results. Most search ads are sold by the PPC
model, where the advertiser pays only when the user clicks on the ad or text
link.
search engine marketing (SEM): The process of building and
marketing a site with the goal of improving its position in search engine
results. SEM includes both search engine optimization (SEO) and search
advertising, or paid search.
search engine optimization (SEO): The process of making a
site and its content highly relevant for both search engines and searchers. SEO
includes technical tasks to make it easier for search engines to find and index
a site for the appropriate keywords, as well as marketing-focused tasks to make
a site more appealing to users. Successful search marketing helps a site gain
top positioning for relevant words and phrases.
search engine results pages (SERPs): The page searchers see
after they've entered their query into the search box. This page lists several
Web pages related to the searcher's query, sorted by relevance. Increasingly,
search engines are returning blended search results, which include images,
videos, and results from specialty databases on their SERPs.
social media: A category of sites that is based on user
participation and user-generated content. They include social networking sites
like LinkedIn or Facebook, social bookmarking sites like Del.icio.us, social
news sites like Digg or Reddit, and other sites that are centered on user
interaction.
spider: A search engine spider is a program that crawls the
Web, visiting Web pages to collect information to add to or update a search
engine's index. The major search engines on the Web all have such a program,
which is also known as a "crawler" or a "bot."
title tag: An HTML meta tag with text describing a specific
Web page. The title tag should contain strategic keywords for the page, since
many search engines pay special attention to the title text when indexing pages.
The title tag should also make sense to humans, since it is usually the text
link to the page displayed in search engine results.
universal search: Also known as blended, or federated search
results, universal search pulls data from multiple databases to display on the
same page. Results can include images, videos, and results from specialty
databases like maps and local information, product information, or news stories.
Web 2.0: A term that refers to a supposed second generation
of Internet-based services. These usually include tools that let people
collaborate and share information online, such as social networking sites,
wikis, communication tools, and collaborative tagging (social indexing).
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