Keyword Difficulty Tool
-
Hi,
When can we expect the keyword difficulty tool to be operational again?
Thanks
-
I love reading these in-depth answers from the CEO of Moz. It's so nice to see a hands-on CEO taking time to deal with even more mundane things like discussions around support issues.
-
Danny - see my responses above to your questions.
-
Permission is different than an API, IMO. Does Google have "permission" to crawl all of the world's websites and serve advertising alongside the results? No. But it's also not illegal or explicitly against those sites' terms (and they can opt out by keeping info behind a registration wall or robots.txt).
Everyone who collects rankings data - us, Raven, AuthorityLabs, Searchmetrics, Conductor, Covario, etc, etc. - does so in the same fashion. There's no special deals or APIs with search engines (Google, Bing, Yandex, Baidu - any of 'em). Anyone showing rankings data is transparent about this simply be virtue of having it.
Sadly, I do agree that nothing we do here will ever be 100% reliable - it's a tough problem, but we believe it's one worth fighting for. This information deserves to be in the hands of marketers, and we're willing to work hard on their behalf to get it (just like our competitors and colleagues in the space do).
In terms of the bet - I'll be happy to just take the losing side now and donate to Movember Will send $99 when I'm back online later today!
In terms of "The degree to which my use account usage has been affected is an irrelevance. A chunk of the $99 you receive every month from me includes the use of tools that are reliant on ranking data to function. By not issuing automatic refunds to all pro users you are simply charging money for a service that was not available."We're more than happy to issue you a full refund, but you and I disagree on the issue of automatically refunding users who didn't use the tools or for whom the service didn't break. I'm happy to chat about that more offline - you can feel free to email me at rand@seomoz.org
-
Hi Rand
It's good to finally have an honest explanation for why these tools have been so unreliable. To the best of my knowledge it has never been made clear anywhere on this website that ranking data is reproduced without the permission of Google. With this in mind, it's little wonder that these tools are so flaky.
The fact remains that you are charging for a service that you are often unable to deliver. I shouldn't have to spend my time drafting emails to your support department requesting a refund every time these tools go down.
If your aim was to be truly transparent, you would make a full declaration on the site along the lines of, "SEOmoz Tools that use ranking data do so without the permission of the search engines concerned. As a result these tools are liable to frequent downtime. Please consider this fact when signing up for a pro account as the availability of these services cannot be guaranteed". At least then users could make an informed decision as to whether to use SEOmoz tools over a competitors'.
The degree to which my use account usage has been affected is an irrelevance. A chunk of the $99 you receive every month from me includes the use of tools that are reliant on ranking data to function. By not issuing automatic refunds to all pro users you are simply charging money for a service that was not available.
Until such a time that you have the full co-operation of Google to collect this data through a licensed API, I really can't see that there is ANYTHING your tech guys could do to make these features 100% reliable. The fact is, that SEOmoz is a service that is, and probably always will be, built on technically shaky foundations.
How about a $99 bet on whether the Keyword Difficulty tool stays fully functional to the end of 2012? The loser donates the money to your Movember charity. You game?
Danny
-
Hi Danny - sorry for my delay. Been a very busy week. You asked:
"Can you please confirm for me the exact reason why the Google ranking data and the Google search volume data in KDT has always been so unreliable."
Yes, I can. What we do is adversarial analytics data. The source of data (the search engines) are not stable providers on information with SLAs and promises and deals. In fact, they are constantly changing and in some cases working actively to prevent the collection of this data. Hence, our attempts to gather this information are sometimes thwarted, as they were this past week. You can see rankings data instability in virtually every other product/software/tool that tries to collect this type of data as well (a continuing problem for all of us in this field over the past 9 years - since Google stopped providing a rankings API).
We currently have a primary system, an early warning alert system, and a backup system. Last week, we lost our primary system, our early warning system alerted us, and we moved to the backup, which had some instability and some trouble catching up to the volumes needed, but eventually did so. I believe 95% of campaign rankings were caught up as of yesterday, and it should be 100% today.
I certainly apologize for the downtime - it sucks and I want to do better. We're building a third and fourth backup system (they were actually already in the sprint for the production engineering team this month, but had to be pushed back to deal with this emergency), and we hope that will help make things more stable in the future. However, until and unless there's an API with a true guarantee, this data's reliability will always be in question.
You also asked about refunds. We always want to be very generous with our refund policy - if your account and usage has been severely impacted by this outage, please write to our help team and we will issue a refund. However, we treat refunds individually, not on the overall level, for temporary outages of individual features.
For many folks, rankings data was on time (as I noted, only a percentage of rankings collections fell behind thanks to the backup). And ~25% of our users will use the keyword difficulty tool in a month (that tool was back up and operational earlier this week, and had less downtime that some of the campaign rankings).
If PRO went down entirely, or if a tool like Open Site Explorer (used by 70%+ of members monthly) was down for a long period, I think we'd need to re-examine the individual-based refund policy, but I'm hoping it never comes to that. The worst we've had so far was a period in September where several services were throwing frequent errors and issues.
I can tell you that over the next 3 months, uptime and reliability is a HUGE focus. The production engineering team has 4 fulltime engineers, 2 contractors, and 2 open full time positions. These folks do nothing but worry about our backups and how to make sure customers get data.
Thanks for sticking by us in tough times, and if you'd like a refund, please do email help@seomoz.org.
-
Hi Peter
I appreciate you providing a full and detailed response but I cannot accept your explanation.
Users being automatically compensated should have nothing to do with how much they are affected by an issue. A big chunk of the $99 fee that you charge every month is for the provision of ranking data. That data is crucial to the both campaign ranking reports and the Keyword Difficulty Tool. If those services were never available, SEOmoz would look pretty poor value and would struggle to charge $99 per month. Charging users a fee, for features they cannot use, regardless of whether or not they actually need that feature, is far from being fair and ethical.
Imagine a situation in which your cell phone operator was unable to provide you with a mobile data service for several months. You could still make calls and send text messages but you couldn't browse the web or send emails. Whether or not you personally needed to use mobile data in those 3 months has nothing to do with the fact that you will have been paying for a service that you could not have used. After all, you could have been on a phone package that included no data and saved yourself several dollars every month!
It is for this reason that this issue should not be handled on a case by case basis. Every pro user has been getting less than they have paid for and should be compensated accordingly. This should be irrespective of whether they use ranking data or have made a complaint.
Can you please confirm for me the exact reason why the Google ranking data and the Google search volume data in KDT has always been so unreliable. This is not a temporary glitch; it has been going on for years! If you are pulling this data from Google's API; is it that the API doesn't function correctly? Or is SEOmoz scraping data from Google web pages without a contractual agreement with Google to do so?
Danny
From: Peter [mailto:notifications-support@seomoz.zendesk.com]
Sent: 01 December 2012 02:19
To: Danny
Subject: [SEOmoz Help] Re: RE: [SEOmoz Help] Re: Credit|
| |
Peter (SEOmoz Help)
Nov 30 06:19 pm (PST)
Danny,
I am happy our tools are back up too! I'm sorry we have dampened your confidence in our services, we hope to gain that back in the future with more service uptime, better and more robust services, and of course better customer experience!
Regarding mass crediting to customers, I think I can answer your questions in a short way that doesn't cause any confusions. The reason we look at customer issue on a case by case basis is because that is exactly how it sounds, the only way to solve customer issues is to physically talk to and solve every unique problem that our customers are facing. While the last week has been tough as a fair number number of problem have been about KWD and Rankings. I think you would be surprised to know that not everyone have the same problems, as SEOmoz PRO have a pretty diverse set of tools that fits a wide audience of SEO consultants which utilizes the suite rather than just one tool (or two in last week's case). The only way we know which specific problem they have is by our users reporting it on the Help@SEOmoz.org, we have tools that allows us to effectively answer and keep track of the issues and come up with unique resolutions, which can include credits/refund which we happily provide if it warrants the situation. While mass refund strategy might be one way to handle issues in your opinion, I believe it is generally not the way we should do business because it is neither generous or authentic. When our users come to us with an issue (which we have no way to know unless they report it), they want more than a credit/refund. I feel like finding ways to provide solutions that are unique to their situation is often time more generous (value-added), transparant and authentic because we admit our limitations to our customers quite freely if that is something we did wrong, we provide solutions that are Unique to their issues and we in turn take those feedback and improve our processess which pays dividends in the future of the product.
I hope this is helpful in letting you know some more of my thoughts, I think it is healthy to disagree on something, I am sorry we lost some of your confidence in our service with last week's outage, we will work hard to try to earn back not only your confidence.
Regards,
Peter|
|
-
I'm glad to see that KDT is up and running but this tool has never been stable. It has got to the point where we cannot ever rely on it to work. I have very little confidence that these problems will not re-occur.
I have repeatedly asked the question why users are not automatically compensated when such a vital part of the service is not available for extended periods of time. All I get are glib replies such as this one from Peter, "I think when it comes to finding a to compensation plans for our customers in a time like this, it is hard to just come up to a standard convention when it comes to compensating our customers for their time. We usually take care of all of our user issues on a case by case basis".
The only "hard" thing about giving compensation to users is that losing some of your profits hurts your bottom line. There is nothing technically difficult about saying "We will rebate users for every day that our tools are down". If you can do it for me, you can it for everyone!
The truth is that compensating only users who complain costs SEOmoz less money. By insisting that this is handled on a case by case basis, what you are really saying is "We are happy to charge users for a service that they have not received".
Which part of TAGFEE does this sound like? It is neither Transparent, Authentic or Generous. Perhaps your famous acronym should be changed to just FEE. This would more accurately reflect SEOmoz's current attitude to its users. Do the right thing here guys!
-
Hi all. Here's a quick update. The good news is that we tracked down the core issues and have made progress toward fixing them. Keyword difficulty is up and running again, although we are still testing and tracking down a few imperfect results. Campaign rankings are in good shape. If you had any missing rankings, they should be retrieved by late tonight, though there a very small set of locales for which rankings are not yet available. And we are still on target to have rank tracker working tomorrow.
I also wanted to note that the engineering team has been investing in building up redundancy to ensure greater resiliency in the future. Unfortunately these systems were not yet complete when the latest problems arose. Fortunately, a lot of the work that the team has put in over the last week has helped us better test and prepare those systems.
Thanks to everyone for your patience during this outage. We don't take these issues lightly and have put every available resource toward solving them. We’re truly sorry for any inconvenience this has caused you.
-
Hi everyone,
We've just updated the Known Issues page and I wanted to reiterate what Nick said over there:
Hey everyone! Some good news from our engineers.
- Keyword Difficulty is back up for Google.
- Rankings are in good condition. We have identified and are in the process of fixing the calendar icon issue. Most campaigns should be fixed late tonight. However, some locales are not available yet.
- Rank Tracker is still a little sick, but we hope to have it up soon.
Thanks for the patience everyone.- Nick
-
I have been told it will be fixed by Friday which is tomorrow.
I asked seomoz on twitter and included the CEO in it.
-
Hi Peter
Thanks for your response
You say, "we believe by providing our users with credits (often multiple months), we think that is the best way to make up for the time that our service is not working".
Your statement seems disingenuous as you a) make me no offer of compensation of multiple months and b) make no offer to other pro users unless they complain and demand compensation. Why would you not compensate all users who are not getting the service that they have paid for?
If your tools are simply scraping content from Google SERPS, then they are bound to go down every time Google decides to change the format of the page. If you don't have access to a Google API these issues are going to keep cropping up with no long term solution in sight.
So, I will ask again...
-
How will I be compensated?
-
How will you compensate all pro users? (Including those that don't complain)
-
How will this issue be fixed in the long term so that it does not keep reoccurring
I don't need your platitudes about how great I am. I just need simple, straight answers from an organisation that claims to be transparent and ethical
Danny
From: Peter [mailto:notifications-support@seomoz.zendesk.com]
Sent: 29 November 2012 17:59
To: Danny
Subject: [SEOmoz Help] Re: RE: [SEOmoz Help] Re: Credit|
| |
Peter (SEOmoz Help)
Nov 29 09:59 am (PST)
Hello Danny,
Thank you for your honest and critical feedback, I want to thank you for being forward on your feelings about our service. It is passionate user like you that keeps us to constantly improve ourselves. Regarding the recently rankings issue, we can understand that when you rely on a service as much as we rely on google for our service, sometimes when problem arises how that can impede or sometimes stop your operations. In terms of our upfront we are with our customers, we consistently update our users our known problems forum, our blog, and twitter @SEOmoz.
Regarding the compensating our users, we believe by providing our users with credits (often multiple months), we think that is the best way to make up for the time that our service is not working. The other form of compensation is obviously our commitment to properly predict and create fire drills for this kind of release from Google in the future (which we learned our lesson from this time). You can read about it here in a great Public post by our CTO: http://www.seomoz.org/blog/biting-the-bullet-of-technical-debt.
I want to both thank you for being a valued user/customer/mozzer and I do apologize for the troubles that you and the community have experience this holiday season.
Warm regards,
Peter Li
SEOmoz Help team.P,S. I will keep this ticket in my queue so I can keep you updated.
|
|
-
-
**The constant stream of excuses may be more believable if this tool has ever been reliable!
If the the ongoing issues with this tool are due to Google's API then you have got to either find a workable LONG TERM solution or charge separately for this tool on the rare occasions on which it does work.
A tool that works half the time is worse than no tool at all
When will SEOmoz be compensating all Pro users? **
-
If your customer services team was truly being "generous", you would be automatically compensating all pro users for a service that consistently fails to work. Instead you ask people to contact you privately and refund only those that shout the loudest.
I thought SEOmoz was supposed to be better than this? What happened to to the TA in TAGFEE? You may need to change this to FEG!
-
Yes, please soon. I'm in my trial period and I like what I see but this hasn't worked once for me since I signed up. I'm hoping this is not the norm--doesn't seem that way b/c the seomoz reputation is great.
-
Hi everyone,
I just wanted to chime in and let you know we are hard at work trying to get this going.
The change in Google's processes took us as much by surprise as it did everyone else. I really appreciate your understand and patience while we get this fixed.
Cheers,
Joel. -
Thank you for the update but it doesn't bode well considering its one of the core features of SEoMoz Pro.
-
Hi! This link will give you information about the Keyword Difficulty tool. We'll keep it updated, as well as our Twitter feed. https://seomoz.zendesk.com/entries/22457872-keyword-difficulty-and-rank-tracker-issues
-
In my experience, there isn't anything that remotely compares to it. SEOMoz, you have a great tool that we want to use. When will this be fixed?
-
I agree this needs to be sorted once and for all as this is getting ridiculous.
Does anyone know a decent alternative to this tool?
-
This needs to be fixed asap. I haven't been able to use it in a week and my clients are not happy!
-
The Keyword Difficulty tool is currently unresponsive due to difficulties with real-time rankings retrievals. We apologize for the inconvenience and are working to fix it.
I have been getting this message for the last week.
This tool is the most important tool i use with seomoz subscription.
Roger fix the problem!
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Buying Domains with Keywords but no PA, no content
MOZ Community, I am trying to gauge both the potential upside and downside of buying a few (relatively long) URLs that encompass some new keywords that are surfacing in our industry and creating permanent redirects to our branded website. [This wasn't my idea!] These URLs haven't previously had any content or owners so their domain authority is low. Will Google still ding us for this behavior? I hope not but I worry that there might be some penalty for having a bunch of redirects pointing at our site. I have read that google will penalize you for buying content-rich sites with high DA and redirecting those URLs to your site but I am unclear about this other approach. It seems like a fairly mundane (and fruitless) play. I tried to explain that we won't reap any SEO rewards for owning these URLS (if there is no content) but that wasn't really heard. Thanks for any resources or information you can share! I would appreciate any resources.
Technical SEO | | ColleenHeadLight0 -
Looks like keyword stuffing, but it isn't
(There was a similar older question on the forum, but it wasn't really answered so please forgive me if this looks like a repeated question) Looks like keyword stuffing, but it isn't We have a massive web store with 80k "commodity products" (and this amount will only increase) which aren't sold the same way normal products are sold (i.e. by brand and model). Commodity products are sold by specification, therefore their product names are actually descriptions of the product. In our case, industrial fasteners (nuts, bolts, washers, screws, etc) sold in bulk. If you click on the link below, you will see that our catalog involves a tremendous amount of repetition, where the products all appear the same, but are varying by dimensions and/or package quantities. The solutions the web store software offers to solve this problem cause issues for us (i.e. displaying the dimensions and quantities ONLY under a common header) but more importantly, we are concerned that search engines are seeing this as keyword stuffing and penalizing the pages. http://www.aspenfasteners.com/Step-Bolts-Inch-Standard-s/407.htm If we can't change the presentation of the page, should we be concerned and if so, how do we let a search engine know that the repetition is legitimate?
Technical SEO | | AspenFasteners0 -
LSI keywords logic - enter in meta and bold in text?
Hello, In the lack of good info about this on the Internet, let me try here. I know that it is a good idea to put LSI keywords in natural flow in the body text of the article. But shall I also put LSI keywords as a meta? In the same manner as doing with non-LSI keywords? Or shall I only reserve meta for non-LSI keywords? In body text, shall I emphasize LSI keywords in bold? As non-LSI keywords already does. This is a bit confusing as I don't wan't LSI keywords to take over show from my long tail (phrase) keyword. I will appreciate if someone could share a bit light over this. Thanks in advance!
Technical SEO | | SEOisSEO0 -
Has Google Stopped Listing URLs with Crawl Errors in Webmaster Tools?
I went to Google Webmaster Tools this morning and found that one of my clients had 11 crawl errors. However, Webmaster Tools is not showing which URLs are having experiencing the errors, which it used to do. (I checked several other clients that I manage and they list crawl errors without showing the specific URLs. Does anyone know how I can find out which URLs are experiencing problems? (I checked with Bing Webmaster Tools and the number of errors are different).
Technical SEO | | TopFloor0 -
Keywords Ranking Dropped
Hi All, One of my website http://www.greenhomepest.com/ were ranking on Google first page for the keywords as mentioned below: pest control in Scottsdale
Technical SEO | | RuchiPardal
pest control in Mesa
pest control in Gilbert
pest control in Tempe
pest control in Peoria
pest control in Queen Creek
pest control in Glendale
pest control phoenix
pest control arizona
pest control az
pest control phoenix az
Pest Control in Chandler But some days before all keywords are disappeared from top 100.I tried to find out the reason but not succeed. Can you please help me to find out the exact reason behind this??0 -
Backlink density & disavow tool
I am cleaning up my backlink profile for www.devoted2vintage.co.uk but before I start removing links I wanted some advice on the following: I currently have over 2000 backlinks from about 200 domains. Is this a healthy ratio or should I prune this? Is there a recommended max number of backlings per domain? Should I delete links to all or some of the spun PR articles (some of the article web pages have over 40 articles with links back to us)
Technical SEO | | devoted2vintage0 -
How to remove crawl errors in google webmaster tools
In my webmaster tools account it says that I have almost 8000 crawl errors. Most of which are http 403 errors The urls are http://legendzelda.net/forums/index.php?app=members§ion=friends&module=profile&do=remove&member_id=224 http://legendzelda.net/forums/index.php?app=core&module=attach§ion=attach&attach_rel_module=post&attach_id=166 And similar urls. I recently blocked crawl access to my members folder to remove duplicate errors but not sure how i can block access to these kinds of urls since its not really a folder thing. Any idea on how to?
Technical SEO | | NoahGlaser780 -
Access To Client's Google Webmaster Tools
Hi, What's the best/easiest way for a client to grant access to his Google Webmaster Tools to me? Thanks! Best...Michael
Technical SEO | | 945010