Link building is challenging. Make sure you’re taking advantage of these quick, easy opportunities to gain a relevant, high quality link.
The post Quick & Easy Link Building Ideas You Don’t Want to Overlook appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
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Link building is challenging. Make sure you’re taking advantage of these quick, easy opportunities to gain a relevant, high quality link.
The post Quick & Easy Link Building Ideas You Don’t Want to Overlook appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
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With Great Content Power Comes (Yep) Great Responsibility – What Will You Do With It
Coming to grips with how to apply ethics to everyday content and marketing decisions is hard. That’s why we’ve gathered insight, advice, and a few examples to help you choose a path that feels both responsible and ethical to you. Continue reading
The post With Great Content Power Comes (Yep) Great Responsibility – What Will You Do With It appeared first on Content Marketing Institute.
4 Ways YouTube is Improving Creators’ Workflows via @sejournal, @MattGSouthern
YouTube Studio will soon receive several quality of life updates designed to help creators get more done in less time.
The post 4 Ways YouTube is Improving Creators’ Workflows appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
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YouTube Rolls Out Clips to 10x More Channels via @sejournal, @MattGSouthern
YouTube is rolling out Clips to ten times more creators, a feature which allows users to grab short, shareable snippets from full length videos.
The post YouTube Rolls Out Clips to 10x More Channels appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
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How to Identify Site Quality for Link Building [Webinar] via @sejournal, @hethr_campbell
Learn how you can scale up a high-impact link building program by focusing on site quality. Register now for our next live webinar.
The post How to Identify Site Quality for Link Building [Webinar] appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
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Twitter Premium Features May Include Undo Sent Tweet via @sejournal, @MattGSouthern
New details discovered about Twitter’s upcoming subscription service reveal one of the features may include the ability to under sent tweets.
The post Twitter Premium Features May Include Undo Sent Tweet appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
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How to Fix Common Service Area Business Issues in Google My Business via @sejournal, @sherrybonelli
Learn about some of the common issues and problems Service Area Businesses experience in GMB and how to solve them.
The post How to Fix Common Service Area Business Issues in Google My Business appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
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3 Quality Signals That Help Content Rank Higher in SERPs
In Google, beauty is in the eyes of crawlers. They look at everything from your text to your meta tags to your style sheets. Here are three strategies to make that picture even better to boost your search rankings. Continue reading
The post 3 Quality Signals That Help Content Rank Higher in SERPs appeared first on Content Marketing Institute.
More than Mascots: It’s Time to End Cultural Appropriation of Native Americans in Sports
No matter the sport, fans’ love for the game—and for their favorite team—runs deep. That love fuels family traditions, community rivalries and hours of tune-in time. It’s also a love that’s central to American culture. But what happens when that sense of connection comes at the expense of a culture or heritage that has endured centuries of harm in the name of Americana? For many Native Americans, the appropriation of sacred symbols and propagation of stereotypes have been par for the course in American sports at professional, collegiate and K-12 levels. But many of today’s fans are saying it doesn’t have to stay that way.
Fans applaud the shift away from the appropriation of Native American culture as mascots. In fact, a recent Nielsen Fan Insights survey in collaboration with IllumiNative found that 46% of respondents believe teams are doing the right thing by changing their names and stopping the use of culturally insensitive mascots. For example, after years of pressure, the Washington Football Team finally retired the use of its former name and logo in 2020. The Cleveland Indians made a similar move at the start of the 2019 baseball season when it stopped using its former mascot, Chief Wahoo.
But 45% of fans want sports teams to do more than just stop using culturally insensitive mascots and names. They want them to end the appropriation of Native American culture as well, citing the harm it does to the community and the damaging emotional effects on Native Americans. And much of the appropriation starts in school sports, which the American Psychological Association says establishes an unwelcome and oftentimes hostile learning environment for American Indian students that affirms negative images/stereotypes that are then promoted in mainstream society.
The response to evolving consumer sentiment is also evolving, as the Cleveland Indians took their stance a step beyond retiring its old mascot when it announced in December of last year that it will change its name, which is perceived as more neutral in nature than its former mascot. The phased evolution of the team’s persona reflects how consumers have shifted from intolerance about offensive mascots to intolerance about any cultural appropriation at all.
In some instances, sports organizations and teams had good intentions, using Native American culture and mascots to honor the community. Crystal Echo Hawk (Pawnee), founder and CEO of IllumiNative, explains that what is intended as an honor can often have a demoralizing effect. “Native Americans are the only group being used as sports mascots, depicting our Native American communities not as people, but as ‘other’. It’s dehumanizing and objectifying.”
Not only do fans recognize that sports mascots are the primary means by which Native American cultures are represented on television, 50% of respondents in our recent survey acknowledged that options to see Native American culture or people are represented on TV were limited—especially in contemporary roles and not just historical context. Outside of team names and logos, Native peoples’ share of screen stands at just 0.27%—a figure about one-sixth the presence of Native Americans in the U.S. population today. Increased news coverage has broadened awareness of ongoing policy issues such as voting access and land rights, but when audiences seek out scripted content on TV that includes Native Americans, representation of Native American talent in lead roles is less than 1% in multiple TV genres:
More needs to be done to expand representation of Native Americans on their terms. And when it comes to championing social issues, sports are leading the way. Nielsen Sports Managing Director Jon Stainer says the changing tide is another opportunity for pro sports teams: “Sports fans want more from the teams they love—beyond watching their favorite teams play their best, fans want their teams to represent their values. The racial reckoning in the U.S. has created a greater awareness, and sports fans expect their favorite teams to stand up for underrepresented communities and take a stand against cultural appropriation of Native Americans.”
Trading cultural appropriation in sports for the visibility that Native Americans deserve—representation that is defined by and not dictated to Native peoples—is a long overdue way to truly honor this underrepresented population.

Google on What’s Going on With FAQ Rich Results via @sejournal, @martinibuster
John Mueller was asked if FAQ structured data still produces rich results. He explained the fine tuning process for search results
The post Google on What’s Going on With FAQ Rich Results appeared first on Search Engine Journal.
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