The Moz Blog

The industry's top wizards, doctors, and other experts offer their best advice, research, how-tos, and insights—all in the name of helping you level-up your SEO and online marketing skills.

Join Us!
Is Google Making Site Search Redundant?
Pete Watson-Wailes

Is Google Making Site Search Redundant?

So here's an interesting thought... You're Google. You have every page on everyone's site in the world (or near as makes no odds) indexed. What more can you do with that information?Well, how about providing a search function for that person's site. Looks like that's what the big G is thinking at the moment at any rate. Have a look at the following examples, and see w...

Twitter Begrudgingly Revisted
Jane Copland

Twitter Begrudgingly Revisted

Caught during a moment of extreme moral ineptitude on Saturday, I did the unthinkable. I signed up to Twitter. I felt like a fourteen seventeen year old who's been thinking about sneaking into the parents' booze cabinet with her friends and finally makes the decision to pick the lock. I felt bad immediately, especially given ...

Level Up Your SEO Skills With Our Free Training

Moz Academy Training

Complete courses to master SEO basics

Keyword Research Master Guide

Learn Keyword Research like the pros

Guide to SEO Competitor Analysis

Win rankings and traffic from your competition

Trademark Law and Domain Names: ACPA or UDRP?
Sarah Bird

Trademark Law and Domain Names: ACPA or UDRP?

Today I want to discuss how trademark law plays out in the course of a domain name dispute. We're going to compare and contract the Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Protection Act with I-CANN's Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy. As I see it, there are generally three kinds of domain name disputes. They are as follows: 1. Cybersquatting: You own a trademark and someone without a right to the mark is exploiting your mark in bad faith. 2. Two trademark holders, one domain name: You own a trademark, but someone else owns the same mark too and there is only one domain name. 3. No one owns the trademark, but everybody wants the brand: Not all domain names are trademark protected, but people inappropriately attempt to use trademark law to resolve domain name issues. While discussing each prototypical domain name dispute, we will also discover the different statutes and dispute resolution procedures available in domain name disputes.

Never miss a beat. Get Moz Blog
email updates daily in your inbox

SEO SWOT Analysis -- Revisiting Marketing Models
Rishi Lakhani

SEO SWOT Analysis -- Revisiting Marketing Models

I work with mostly small independent sites with little or next to nothing budgets and help them turn things around if possible. My biggest success story was a client who had 1 or 2 patients a week through word of mouth, and then grew to an average of 50 referrals through online marketing monthly, as well as a huge established practice. I cant take all the credit – he worked hard at...

Why Is Preemptive Reputation Management So Difficult?
Jane Copland

Why Is Preemptive Reputation Management So Difficult?

I remember the first time I heard about someone ending a relationship via email. It was a long time ago (like, in the nineties) and possibly in the days before I had an email account of my own. Everyone was shocked at how someone could bring themselves to do something like that online. Now, such a break-up would constitute a gross lack of inventiveness. Why not edit your ...

Web Design for ROI: Chapters 1 and 2
Rebecca Kelley

Web Design for ROI: Chapters 1 and 2

Every time Rand receives a marketing book, he puts in on my desk. I don't know if it's a gesture of "Here, you read stuff..." or if it's a more direct "Read this or you're fired" (which is clearly how Rand operates, for those of you who know him well), but I've got a stack of books at home that are one giant "Read these" list. During my flights to and from Sa...