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MATT CUTTS: Hey, everybody.
We had some noise in the room that we were in, so we shifted
to a new locale.
Hope it's not too bad.
We have a question from Madrid, Spain today.
The question is "Have you learned something about SEO
that you wouldn't know if you haven't had your blog?"
Really good question.
I started my blog because I wanted to have a place which
was a channel where I could just put up my personal
thoughts or thoughts about Google and not have to worry
about something getting edited or basically have an
unvarnished channel.
And what I didn't expect is it would help me step into the
mindset of a webmaster or a site owner a lot better.
If you're only working on trying to reduce spam, and you
never, ever see that many of the great sites out there,
then it's easy to get into a mindset where you're like, OK,
there's a lot of bad stuff out there.
But it's easy to forget, there's a lot of great stuff
out there as well.
And so I like to tell a story that one of the very first VPs
of Engineering, Urs Hoelzle, used to say, look these are
regular people.
They have websites.
Of course they want to rank highly because they think they
have great things to show the world, and we need to be
sympathetic to that.
And so a lot of people, when they come into Google, I often
will do a new engineer orientation or at least I used
to in the past.
And I'd say OK, what do you call it whenever people try to
rank higher in search engines?
And they'd say well, it's spam.
And that's not true.
Like it's a natural instinct to want to do well and want to
do better in search engines.
So I think that's one thing that I learned, is how to step
in the mindset a little bit better of a publisher or a
site owner.
There's definitely been a few things I've learned.
Like if you make lists, if you say the top 11 things about
whatever, you definitely get a lot more clicks.
And so it's sort of a good reminder about human nature
that unless you're actually practicing some of that
keyword selection, what things do I put in my title, oh, it
turns out if you write about iPods, or gadgets, or
accessories, or Chrome extensions, those can drive a
lot of traffic.
You know, it's really helpful to see all that stuff so
that's not just an academic exercise.
So there's been a lot of stuff that I've learned about SEO
because I've had my own site.
It's something that I'm glad that I do, and I encourage a
lot of the people on our team to have some sort of web
presence, or have a blog or have their own domain, so that
they can just remember, OK, what we want to do is find the
best possible sites.
We don't want to get in the mindset of every site being
bad, and we have to take action on all those bad sites,
and forget that there's a lot of great stuff out there.