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Showing posts with label free google analytics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label free google analytics. Show all posts

Monday, 24 June 2013

Video best practices | Experienced Webmaster

With video search, just as with web search, Google's goal is to provide the best and most relevant results to our users. Of the billions of Google searches done every day, many are looking for video content. Google Videos is the largest video search property on the Web and one of Google's fastest growing search properties worldwide. One of the greatest benefits to Google Videos is the potential exposure to these millions of users. Following the best practices listed below (as well as our usual Webmaster Guidelines) will increase the likelihood that your videos will be returned in search results.

Mark up your videos with schema.org
Submit a Video Sitemap or mRSS feed to Google
Tell Google when you remove videos from your site
Create high-quality thumbnail images
JavaScript, Flash, and hash tags
Create a great user experience

Mark up your content for schema.org:- When video content is marked up in the body of the page, search engines and other sites can recognize it and may use it to improve the display of video content on a page or in search results. Marking up your content provides information about your videos that allows Google and other sites to index them. Google recommends schema.org markup but will also recognize Facebook Share and RDFa markup. Learn more about schema.org and Facebook Share and RDFa.


Submit a Video Sitemap or mRSS feed to Google:- Google Video Sitemaps is an extension to the Sitemap protocol that enables you to publish and syndicate online video content and its relevant metadata to Google in order to make it searchable in the Google Video index. Sitemaps are an excellent way to make sure that Google knows about all the content on your site, including content we might not discover with our usual crawling methods. You can use a Video Sitemap to add descriptive information (for example, a video's title, description, or duration) that makes it easier for users to find a particular piece of content. This is particularly important if your site uses JavaScript or Flash as part of its navigation. When a user finds your video through Google, they will be linked to your hosted environments for the full playback. You can also use an mRSS feed instead of a Video Sitemap. More information about creating a Video Sitemap.

Tell Google when you remove videos from your site:- When an embedded video has been removed from a page, some sites use a Flash player to tell users that the video is no longer available. This can be problematic for search engines, and therefore, we recommend the following options:

Return an 404 (Not found) HTTP status code for any landing page that contains a removed or expired video. In addition to the 404 response code, you can still return the HTML of the page to make this transparent to most users.

Indicate expiration dates in schema.org markup, video Sitemaps (use the <video:expiration_date> element), or mRSS feed (<dcterms:valid> tag) submitted to Google.

Create high-quality thumbnail images:- Google shows thumbnail-sized summary images next to video results. We accept thumbnails of any image format but require them to be at least 160x90 pixels. The max size is 1920 x 1080 pixels.

Google will identify representative thumbnail images for your video pages based on the information found on your site, in your Sitemap, or in markup. If you provide the content location—the URL of the video file—we can automatically generate thumbnails from your video.

JavaScript, Flash, and hash tags:- When designing your site, it's important to configure your video pages without any overly complex JavaScript or Flash setup. For instance, if you have many videos playable from within the same Flash object, those will not be correctly surfaced in Video Search, because we can't provide users with a unique URL to each video. Similarly, if you are using overly complicated JavaScript to create the embed objects from within JavaScript under only certain circumstances (i.e., using hash tags in the URL), then it's also possible that we will not correctly surface your videos.

Create a great user experience on your video pages:- In addition to simply having great video, you should think about the design of the HTML pages around your content. For example, consider the following:
Create a standalone landing page for each video, where you can gather all its related information. If you do this, be sure to provide unique information—such as descriptive titles and captions—on each page.
Make it as easy as possible for users to find and play the videos on each landing page. The presence of a prominent, embedded video player using widely supported video formats can make your videos more attractive to users and easier for Google to index.

If You Have any Query about content understand, just simple you can get solution in search box search 
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Tuesday, 4 June 2013

Request removal of Google-hosted content. | Experienced Webmaster

Request removal of Google-hosted content (YouTube, Blogger, etc.) for legal reasons:

If you believe content hosted by a Google property (for example, Blogger, YouTube, or Google+) or displayed in Google search results should be removed under applicable law, you can use one of our legal content removal forms to submit a request for review, including a notification under the U.S. Digital Millennium Copyright Act for content that you believe infringes your copyright. (That page also includes forms for requesting restoration of a page that Google has removed, including a form for counter-notification under the DMCA.)

If you want content removed from Google's search results, it's important to bear a couple of points in mind.
Google doesn't own the web, and can't remove content from the web.
The material indexed in Google’s search results are controlled by the webmasters of the sites that host it, and not by Google. Google cannot remove content from other sites on the web.

If you don't own the site on which the content appears, you should ask the webmaster to remove the content or block it from search engines 
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Request removal of an image | Experienced Webmaster

If you want an image removed from Google's search results, it's important to bear a couple of points in mind.
Google doesn't own the web, and can't remove content from the web.
The images in Google’s search results are controlled by the webmasters of the sites that hosts those images.

If you don't own the site on which the image appears, you should ask the webmaster to remove the image or block it from search engines. How to contact a webmaster.

Once the webmaster has removed the image URL from the webmaster’s site or blocked it from being included in our index, our search results will automatically reflect the change after we next crawl the site. You can expedite this process using the URL removal tool.

To use the URL removal tool, you’ll need to know the exact URL of the image you want removed. Here’s how to find it:
Click the image that you locate in the image search results.
Right-click View original image or Full size, and copy the link address.
Paste the URL into a file or document, so it’s available when you use the URL removal tool.
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Request removal of a cached page | Experienced Webmaster

If the page has been updated by the site owner, but the out-of-date version is still visible in Google, you can request removal of the cached version from Google's search results. The process can be a little tricky, so make sure you read these instructions closely. (Important: This process applies only to HTML pages. Other files, like .doc files or PDFs, must be completely removed from the website.)

Remove the cached version of a page from Google's search results:
Go to the Google public URL removal tool.
Click New removal request.
Type the URL of the webpage that's been changed (not the Google search results URL or cached page URL). The URL is case-sensitive—use exactly the same characters and capitalization that the site uses. How to find the right URL.
Click Continue.

Type a word that appears on the out-of-date cached version of the page, but not anywhere on the live version. This is to help Google understand that the page has changed.

It’s often more effective to type a single word rather than a phrase. Don’t describe the removed content or the changes made; instead, explicitly provide a word that was in the old version but is missing from the new. For example, the cached page might contain your name, which has since been removed from the live version. In this case, don’t tell us that "my name has been removed'; instead, type your actual name ("Sylvia") as it appears in the cached version.

Click Remove cache.

Example

Submitting a cache removal request can be tricky. Google must be able to verify that the current, updated page no longer contains the problematic material.

Say you've discovered a page stating that "Susan's cats are ugly". The webmaster has updated the site so that it now indicates that "Susan's cats are beautiful." The problem is that the text "Susan's cats are ugly" still appears in the cached page, and is turning up in search results snippets.

UnsuccessfulYou create a URL removal request and include the problematic text "Susan's cats are ugly." Result? Your request is unsuccessful. This is because while the term "ugly" has been removed from the page, the term "Susan's cats" still appears.

SuccessfulCreate a new cache removal request that lists a word or term that appears nowhere on the live version of the page. In this case, enter the term "ugly".

Once your request has been processed and Google confirms that the submitted word(s) no longer appear on the page, the search result will no longer show a snippet, nor will the cached page be available. The title and the URL of the page will still be visible, and the entry may still appear in search results for searches related to the content that has been removed, even if those words no longer appear in the snippet. However, once the page has been re-crawled and re-indexed, the updated snippet and cached page can be visible in our search results.
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Request removal of an entire page | Experienced Webmaster

Request removal of an entire page:

Go to the Google public URL removal tool.
Click New Removal Request.
Type the URL of the webpage you want removed (not the Google search results URL or cached page URL). The URL is case-sensitive—use exactly the same characters and capitalization that the site uses. (How to find the right URL.)
Click Continue.
Click Remove this page.
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