HTML5 & SEO impact.

SEO - Search Engine Optimization

SEO - Search Engine Optimization

I’m lucky. I managed to create a compelling info-sphere through Twitter. But compelling doesn’t always mean it guides towards striking insights. Sometimes the content I run up to is a bit blinkered – though useful. It should not come as a surprise then that I want to have my say from time to time on a specific topic. Just to put things in a perspective.

The info-sphere on HTML5 and its impact on SEO.

I struggled before with the questions arising around “web”, “internet”, “app” and “HTML5” – so I digged a little deeper into that. While doing so, the info-sphere pin-pointed an article that discussed the impact of “html5 on SEO”. Curiosity arouse. I clicked the link. Read the article. Frowned. Here’s why.

What is SEO?

SEO stands for Search Engine Optimization. It’s a term that describes a bunch of tactics by which your webpages rank well in search engines for a specific keyword. It results in visitors that are interested in your topic. After all, they looked for the content themselves, they were not pushed the messages on to them.

SEO tactics respond to the way search engine’s algorithms function. The only goal is to be easily found and to attract website visitors. Once those visitors are on your page, it’s not SEO that’ll turn them into a prospect or lead. SEO however is a start to get a “pool of convertible people”.

What is HTML5? Does it kill the “app economy”?

So what exactly is HTML5? What is its impact on the “world of the web”?

HTML5, as successor to previous HTML languages, adds many new syntactical features. These features are designed to make it easy to include and handle multimedia and graphical content on the web without having to resort to proprietary plugins and APIs. Other new elements are designed to enrich the semantic content of documents. New attributes have been introduced for the same purpose, while some elements and attributes have been removed. Some elements have been changed, redefined or standardised. The APIs and DOM are no longer afterthoughts, but are fundamental parts of the HTML5 specification.

The above makes clear there are some new “metadata” which can be used by SEO-marketers so to improve their find-ability in a new “era of the web”.

More important however from my point of view, is the fact that HTML5 is a markup language fitted for several OS. This basically means that iOS developers and Android developers don’t have to code a separate app for the different platforms. Develop your application in HTML5 and its ready to go to market in all OS. Just great, right? Yes, so why do people believe the “web” will be replaced by “apps” then?

HTML5

HTML5

As demonstrated, HTML5 is a great solution for your mobile web activities. It could save you a lot of money because you don’t need to develop for specific proprietary platforms (as Android, iOS, RIM, …).

Nevertheless, you want to be found on smartphones too. This takes us back to the mobile web and – of course – mobile SEO.

The Mobile Web: HTML5 vs Apps

So to answer the questions “what is mobile SEO”, one needs to first answer the question “what is the mobile web”. The mobile web is a collection of web pages that can be accessed through a smart phone. If we narrow this down a little, one could say: “the mobile web are pages optimized for viewing and interaction on a mobile phone”. Those pages typically get an URL that has the following format: m.website.com. If you visit these pages, you can be pretty sure they’ve done their best to optimize their web pages for the “mobile web”.

As we all know, we often make use of the mobile web through apps. These are in fact software functionalities to reach a specific goal. Let’s say you’re on the go (mobile) and you want to know which train to catch. You probably have an app for that. So you check that app and get the best train for your journey.

What’s truly at stake here, is that mobile people consult the web for a specific purpose. They know what they are after and need the information quickly. Today, OS-dependent apps are the best and fastest way to fulfill that need. HTML5 could also do the trick. So you basically don’t need to develop an app per se. I’m sorry, I know it’s trendy to build one.

What is mobile SEO?

Mobile Search

Mobile Search

Mobile Search is about “people on the go (mobile) in need and searching for specific information urgently”. As a result, I believe your mobile SEO content should address the following questions:

  • What information do people want to know when on the go?
  • Can they easily find that on our web?
  • Can they easily take on action once they found it?
  • What can we do to improve this? What traditional SEO tactics are valid?

It’s the principle. Not the technology.

Roundabout-phobia: the psychology and the sociology.

Roundabout - source: michigan.gov

Roundabout - source: michigan.gov

From the Office to the House: 8 roundabouts

I confess, my ecologic foot print could be lower. After all I drive from my place to the office and back almost every day. I’ve done that for quite a while now but never realized I met 8 roundabouts.
Until recently when the driver in front of me seemed afraid to simply enter the circle. As this happened over and over at each roundabout, I started thinking.

Defining roundabout-phobia: the psychological story

The ride seemed endless. Plenty of time to think.

What is at stake here? Something like roundabout-phobia? Is it similar to phenomenons as agoraphobia? Is it being afraid of entering the circle? Some seem to worry about driving in the inner circle of a roundabout…

I started wondering whether this lists on any disorder list. I guessed it would take us too far to officially list roundabout-phobia on DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders).

Browsing the web for roundabout-phobia

When I finally arrived at home, I opened up my laptop and Googled “roundaboutphobia”. These were the results.
I went for the third link, a story from the “Coffeeshop Correspondent” about “roundabout-phobia”.

Roundaboutphobia - Google serps

Roundaboutphobia - Google serps

The Coffeeshop Correspondent’s story on roundabout-phobia: the sociological story

My Google research was to find out whether the phenomenon was known by psychologist. I looked at it as a disorder. The Coffeeshop Correspondent digged up a completely different view: a sociological, cultural one.

Roundabout-phobia seems to be rampant here in Canada.I have visited many cities in Eastern Canada and can count the number of roundabouts (traffic circles) on one hand. This is roughly the same number as can be found in any ONE populated center in the UK. Kudos to Oromocto for their forward thinking in recently building one of their own.

How the sociological and psychological relate

The Coffeeshop Correspondent was a completely different view. Roundabouts are a cultural thing. Some cultures love them – others start to see the benefits just now. The correspondent beautifully embeds this in an urban development / spatial planning policy making debate.

But what happens if an American visits Europe, hires a car to tour around and then suddenly drives up to a roundabout for the first time? Right. The experience might be similar to a continental visiting the UK with his own car and the ferry.

Maybe that day I drove behind a north-american visiting Europe. Yes, I recall the car having a Hertz Car Hire sticker.

Roundabouts are common in Australia, Belgium, China, Denmark, France, Germany, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Malaysia, Morocco, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Qatar, Spain, the United Arab Emirates, and the United Kingdom. Compelling fact: half of the world’s roundabouts are in France (over 30,000 as of 2008). – Source: Wikipedia, the globe’s crowd-approved encyclopedia –

Love how psychology and sociology intertwine?

Whispering Web – The Book.

I’ve made your life easier.

Well, I made it easier if you were to read everything ever posted on this blog. Consider how many clicks that’d take. At least a thousand, right?

Below is a book that collects all articles written in the first year of this blog. Reading all articles in this manner will take you about 70 clicks. I saved you just about 930 clicks. And I might argue that 930 clicks require at least 2 doctor visits because of a painful wrist. I’m not a doctor price specialist but I believe two visits quickly will cost you about 50 EUR or Dollars.

Hope you enjoy slide-reading through it.