This time I am interviewing one of the top SEO expert Micheal Martinez.  He is currently running his blog: SEOTheory
 I am very much glad that he answered all my difficult questions related
 to SEO, Social media and many more. I appreciate his time and efforts 
he had put in this interview. So I hope my readers gonna enjoy it.  
                 
 
First of all thanks a lot for accepting my interview proposal. I and my readers are very pretty glad to have you . Please tell us about yourself and your educational background.
First of all thanks a lot for accepting my interview proposal. I and my readers are very pretty glad to have you . Please tell us about yourself and your educational background.
I was born and raised in the southern United States before there were many educational programs for gifted students.  I dropped out of high school in the 9th
 grade because I was frustrated with the education system holding me 
back.  Eventually I went to college and earned two degrees in Data 
Processing and Computer Science.  I have always been a science fiction 
and fantasy fan, which may have influenced my decision to work with 
computers.  I got my first programming job when I was 15; it was part of
 a Summer Jobs program for teens.  That was in 1975.
I became involved in the online world in
 the early 1990s through a job that required me to join a software 
support community on CompuServe.  From there I gradually migrated to the
 Internet and I built my first Website in 1996.  By the end of 1998 I 
had become involved with search engine optimization.  After practicing SEO
 for myself and occasionally as a contractor for many years, I changed 
careers in 2006 and took a position as Director of Search Strategies for
 a company in Seattle.  In 2012 I went back to freelancing and formed an
 SEO consulting partnership with my friend Randy Ray.  We had collaborated on some projects for a few years and finally decided to work together full-time.
What suggestions would like to my blog Bloggersideas.com. What things you didn’t like about my blog? Please give me your opinion.
Create a name for yourself by publishing
 articles you will enjoy reading in five years.  If you feel they are 
still useful and relevant then – without any reservations or excuses – 
they probably will be and your readers will probably agree with you.  No
 amount of SEO advice can outperform that approach to blogging.
Which blog do you open daily and what are your favorite blogs ?
I read several SEO blogs daily, mostly 
because they cover newsworthy topics: Search Engine Roundtable, Search 
Engine Land, and Marketing Land.  I also check some of the official 
Google blogs on a regular basis.  I like Jeff Bullas and Dan Zarella’s 
blogs, although they don’t write as much as I would like them to.  Bill Slawski’s “SEO By the Sea” is a must-read for anyone who is interested in search algorithm mechanics.  Eric Enge’s interviews on Stone Temple’s Website are simply amazing.
And I watch the Google Webmaster videos even though they seldom provide much insight for advanced SEOs.  Sometimes you come across a real gem.
What are your favorite social media tools ? Which tools do you prefer to use to incease user engagement?
At the present time I am using Twitterfeed and Twuffer
 more than any other tools.  I try to respond to most people who say 
something to me, either on my blogs or on Twitter.  I ignore Facebook as
 much as possible but once in a while I respond to someone there, too.
Two things improve engagement
 in my experience: treating people with respect and publishing something
 where they feel compelled to discuss it with you.  Writing from the 
heart rather than from keyword research works better if you’re trying to get people to stop lurking and say something.
These days I can see that many well established blogs and websites losing their rankings? Why this is happening. Is SEO dead ?
Search engine optimization should never have been tied to rankings. 
 12 years ago we didn’t know any better.  Five years ago we DID know 
better but people continued to talk about rankings.  We should always 
have been measuring SEO value in terms of search referral traffic.
I find that search engine optimization 
works just as well today as it did 12 years ago.  What is not working so
 well are all the bad ideas people have been sharing on their blogs, at 
conferences, and in their books.  SEO should not be treated as a 
production process that can be followed according to a formula.  You 
have to treat each Website differently.
The Websites that run into trouble with 
the search engines are following formulas for success.  Ultimately that 
leads to failure.
Is there any benefit of doing SEO on copied content, as some experts are ranking copied content high on SERP?
That is a long, complicated topic.  The 
short answer is, yes, you should optimize duplicate or copied content.  
But the longer answer requires that you explain what it means to 
“optimize” such content for search.  Today we devote more effort to canonicalization
 because the search engines demand it; hence, the optimization process 
for duplicate content is not so much about how to bring in more traffic 
for it but how to use it to channel value into source content.
On the black hat side there are things you can do with duplicate content that leverage some of the gimmicks black hats favor. 
 Is that “optimization”?  I guess opinions will vary, but if you’re 
getting the best search performance value out of the copied content that
 you can, then that is optimal performance is it not?
Optimal performance does not necessarily
 equate to the most efficient, or most effective search marketing 
strategy.  I think people assume that if you achieve optimal performance
 you’re being efficient, but sometimes you pick the wrong strategy and 
you lose efficiency despite achieving optimal performance.
How does Google see backlinks from guest posts?
They treat guest post backlinks like they treat any other backlinks.  Every linking source has to earn Google’s trust.
I have been warning people not to use 
guest posts as a linking strategy for almost two years now, but not 
because guest posts are bad.  It is the pattern that you create when you
 do something “just for links”, “just for the search engines” that gets you into trouble.
Guest posting has always created 
incredible value for both writers and readers when the content was the 
most important part of the process.  The moment you start guest posting 
for links you devalue the content and yourself and that shows.  So 
naturally the search engines lose interest in what you are trying to say.
Being known by a million people is 
better than boosting a site to the top of a single popular keyword for a
 few weeks or months with links.  After the links stop working people stop reading your content because you made the links more important than your own name.
With increased volatility in the search engine landscape, how do you see SEO future shape up in the time to come? Does it still remain competitive to Paid Search Marketing?
Natural search engine optimization 
should always provide considerable value when compared with paid search 
marketing.  In fact, most people don’t do very well with paid search marketing.  It’s a very challenging business model and I know many people who avoid it because they lose money at it.
The PPC specialists who maintain high ROI have carved out an important niche for themselves.  That is what an organic search specialist has to do.  You have to show your clients sufficient ROI to keep them interested in the project.  Sometimes that just isn’t possible to do.
You can dominate a search result by spending a lot of money, but if the return on investment is poor then you have achieved a Pyrrhic victory.  It’s not worth winning.
5 must have SEO tools in your arsenal?
A blog.
A browser.
A Webmaster dashboard at the search engine.
A half-way decent spam filter.
A rudimentary analytics tool.
I am a big believer in “less is more” 
with search engine optimization.  The fewer tools you rely upon the 
better you have to become at seeing problems and finding solutions for 
them.   Tools hold people back.
Mobile SEO Dos & Don’ts?
DO make your site easy to read on a smart device.
DO use mobile-friendly navigation.  “Less is more”
DO expect mobile users to be more ephemeral than desktop users.
DON’T assume all “mobile” traffic is mobile.  Some of it is robots.
DON’T create short, fluffy content 
for mobile users.  They want a good return on their investment.  Mobile 
browsing is painful and users don’t want to waste their time on low quality content.
Best possible way to decipher the ‘not provided’ organic keywords?
I don’t actually worry about it.  I only ever advocated looking at search referral keywords
 for the sake of identifying weak content.  You can still do that by 
looking at which pages receive the least amount of referral traffic from
 search engines.
Why do you need to know that you received 1,000 visits for “FAVORITE KEYWORD”?  What is that going to tell you?
If you receive 1,000 visits for PAGE ALPHA and 1 visit for PAGE BETA then you know you need to do something about BETA.
How does Google know if one blog is a sponsored blog vs guest blog? We only do guest blogs, because we don’t want to buy links, but many blogs these days ask for money.
Paid posting creates tell-tale signs, the so-called “statistical footprint”. 
 They have developed sophisticated learning algorithms but their spam 
teams have collected a large number of examples of “good sites” and “bad
 sites” for the algorithms to learn from.
What are some strategies for brainstorming and creating linkbait in SEO?
I like to scan news feeds and social 
media to see which conversations the media and their audiences keep 
going for several weeks.  If a topic has that long a lifetime in news 
and social media then it will probably have a long lifetime on the Web.
After choosing a topic I do some 
research to see which questions have been satisfactorily answered and 
which questions have not.  Of the answered questions, I look to see 
which ones whose answers are easy to find in search.
I usually come up with a short of list 
of topics I can write about.  At that point I pick the topic that is 
most interesting to me.  If I as the writer am interested in the topic I
 will probably write something pretty good for it.
This approach works well for all kinds 
of topics but if you only concentrate on upcoming events you have a 
better chance of “being there” when people go looking for answers.  That
 is, some well-promoted events stimulate increases in search traffic 
around related topics.  If you anticipate that growth in traffic then you can prepare the best, most useful content for people to find when the time is right.
What kind of competitor analysis tools you are using? Can you suggest best tools to track competitor backlinks?
When we look at backlinks my partner and I tend to use Majestic SEO and AHREFS.  But we don’t really recommend looking at competitor backlinks.  That’s usually a good way to find links that will get you penalized.
One of the directories I am in is being reviewed by Google. Should I be concerned that my website will be penalized?
One bad directory link won’t hurt you.  
Five bad directory links should not hurt you.  Ten bad directory links 
probably won’t hurt you.  But if you’re getting a lot of directory links
 you should ask yourself, “Who uses these directories to find Websites?”
If a directory link is not sending you 
traffic you probably don’t need it.  Search engines don’t mind small 
niche directories that people actually use.  They do object to 
directories that were “made for SEO (link building)”.
Social shares from Blog itself and from using third party services like JustRetweet have same impact on Serp or not?
There is no SEO benefit from social 
shares.  Natural shares indicate that people are aware of you and 
interested in your content.  Natural shares should correlate well with 
other signals that search engines use to promote content that people 
like.
Artificial shares may create visibility for you in social media environments,
 and that visibility may translate into traffic.  But if you’re 
violating social media services’ guidelines by buying shares then you 
risk losing a valuable channel for traffic.
As with aggressive search engine 
marketing, aggressive social media marketing comes with risks and you 
need to be aware of and manage those risks.  Churn-and-burn marketing is
 not unique to SEO.  It also happens in social media.  No one should use
 churn-and-burn marketing strategies with any brand Website or social media account because once you lose that visibility it may be gone forever.
I hope you enjoy this long interview of Michael Martinez. He had shared his valuable strategies here. 
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Great article. I cover every point of my doubts. I loved this post.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for this article.
Regard,
Social Media Marketing Agency
SEO Company
PPC Company