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Google Watch

Google Launches New Organic Search Algorithm

by Bill Cullifer on November 9, 2011

Google Launches New Organic Search Algorithm – Emphasis is on Breaking News and Commenting systems like Facebook, and Google+.

According to the Search Marketing company Covario, the goal of this change is simple. For queries conducted by searchers where information changes constantly—which Google estimates is about 35% of the queries—there is a new rendering of the organic results page starting with “news for QUERY.”

The speculation is that this is a strategic response to Facebook and Twitter—i.e., provision of real time information through directed queries on relevant topics (as opposed to open stream of incoming information, albeit timely, from competing social media platforms). Also, at a technical level, Google is rolling out some new technology to Googlebot that helps the system better index AJAX/Java Script commenting systems like Facebook, along with Google+. Walk aways for Web professionals include:

* Social signals is s strong factor
* Early end of the buying cycle
* Reputation management

In this five minute interview with Pete Dudchenko, Senior Director Covario provides a couple of recommendations for our customers to help them understand what impact this will have on SEO results, and what they need to do to address this change.

First, social media will be more intertwined into SEO. Remember 18 months ago, Google rolled out the “Latest”
function; a secondary page that users could activate on the left hand navigation to see social media data. We wrote
about that update and said at the time “that if more than 10% of queries ultimately go to this secondary page, then
optimizing for “recency” as well as “relevancy” will become the key to SEO. And how will that be done—integration of social media programs with SEO.” This is an upgrade to this function that a) moves the “latest” to the main SERP and b) does so only for a subset of queries where recency is relevant. So social media programs—i.e., updates to Facebook and Twitter comments by advertisers, updated reviews, and any time of blog based content generation will require infusion with high value SEO keywords and link backs to other content pages in order to align with the high value queries and command the newly available premium shelf space.

Second, the high value generic keywords will make up the majority of the frequent updates (“Best camera,” “cheap
laptop,” “best tablet”) category of affected queries. If advertisers are going to build their processes—we recommend this. Identify the top 25 queries driving traffic to their site. Conduct queries and see if the “News for” box is appearing. If so, monitor competitor and advertiser presence on a series of queries over a week or two and see what happens. If there is degradation in corresponding web traffic during this time period, then these become the priority for the social media programs content generation.

Last, reputation management will also be impacted. Industry announcements, including company wins and losses will find their way to the top of the rankings and may begin to overtake historically high ranking pages for branded search terms. This is both positive and negative depending on how good the news is on a given topic. Reacting quickly to negative publicity, while promoting positive news, through the systems by which “News for” reacts will become a key aspect of public relations. Additional information can be found on the Covario website

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The Web Platform – Interview with Chris Wilson, Developer Advocate Google at the Open Web Camp III Palo Alto, CA

Today’s podcast is with Chris Wilson, Developer Advocate at Google. Chris and a number of his colleagues, friends and other such notable Web professionals participated in the Open Web Camp III event that took place late last month at the Stanford University Campus in Palo Alto California.

In this three minute event conclusion interview, I asked Chris to sum up the benefits of attending Open Web Camp III. I also asked Chris to share his thoughts and perspective on HTML5.

For those of you that have been around for awhile, you’ll recall that Chris Wilson worked for Microsoft and has a long standing history working on the Web dating back to 1993. Chris was the co author of the Windows version of Mosaic, the first mass market Web browser. He’s also credited for introducing CSS to Microsoft IE working for Microsoft for 15 years just to name a few of his career contributions to the Web.

Chris has since moved on to Google where among other developer advocate duties he’s working on Google TV.

Whether you’re a veteran Web pro or just starting out in the Web, I think you’ll benefit from learning about Chris Wilson, one the early pioneers of the Web that continues to help shape the course of the Web as we know it today.

For your benefit, I am including an audio presentation of a keynote of Chris’s entitled “The Interconnectedness of all Things” courtesy of the Web Directions Conference and their creative commons license. It’s worth checking out and I highly recommend that you take the time to listen. We can learn a lot from individuals like Chris and I’d like to give him a shout out for the courtesy of speaking to me and for the interview.

I am also including a presentation slide deck from Chris that features:

* Why the Web platform is poised to further explode
* How to be a Responsible Web Designer

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Google Search Formula Rank Creates Controversy

by Bill Cullifer on March 7, 2011

Google Search Rank Creates Controversy and Critics

According to press reports over the weekend, Google search revamp is under fire as unfair says SJ Mercury News.

According to the WSJ online, Google Inc., long considered the gold standard of Internet search, is changing the secret formula it uses to rank Web pages as it struggles to combat websites that have been able to game its system.

The online report is quoted as saying, “the Internet giant, which handles nearly two-thirds of the world’s Web searches, has been under fire recently over the quality of its results.” Google said it changed its mathematical formula late Thursday in order to better weed out “low-quality” sites that offer users little value. Some such sites offer just enough content to appear in search results and lure users to pages loaded with advertisements.

Google has changed its search algorithm in an effort to filter out data from “content farms” in search results. Marcelo Prince, Jessica Vascellaro and Simon Constable discuss how this affect site rankings and revenues for businesses.

Google generates billions of dollars from advertising linked to its search engine, whose influence as a front door to the world’s online content and commerce continues to grow by the year. Google’s power over the fortunes of so many other companies has made it a target of competitor complaints. It has also faced government investigations, including scrutiny by regulators in the U.S. and Europe.

The Silicon Valley company built its business on the strength of algorithms that yield speedy results. The company constantly refines those formulas, and sometimes takes manual action to penalize companies that it believes use tricks to artificially rise in search rankings. In recent weeks, it has cracked down on retailers J.C. Penney Co. and Overstock.com Inc.

Last month, Google acknowledged it “can and should do better” to beat back sites that “copy content from other websites” or provide information that is “just not very useful” but are ranked highly anyway.

“I’ve never seen Google be attacked on the relevancy of their results the way they have these past couple of months,” said Danny Sullivan, editor of a widely read blog about the field called Search Engine Land.

The debate about Google’s results was sparked by a recent blog post by Vivek Wadhwa, a former technology executive and a visiting scholar at the University of California-Berkeley. He wrote that his students had trouble finding basic information about the founders of start-up companies on Google.

“The problem is that content on the internet is growing exponentially and the vast majority of this content is spam,” or of little use, he wrote. “Google has become a jungle.”

On Friday, Mr. Wadhwa said in an interview that he had previously “written Google off” but is now “optimistic they may well get this under control,” though it will take time to see whether there are improvements. “It’s not rocket science; they know who the bad guys are, they compensate the companies” by letting them post Google ads and share revenue, he said.

Google search engineer Amit Singhal said in an interview that the company added numerous “signals,” or factors it would incorporate into its algorithm. Among those signals are “how users interact with” a site.

It also used feedback from hundreds of people it regularly hires to evaluate changes. These “human raters” were asked to look at search results and decide whether they would give their credit card number to a site or follow its medical advice, Mr. Singhal said.

On Thursday night, Mr. Singhal and a colleague wrote in a blog post that most of the changes would be “so subtle that very few people notice them” but “it’s a big step in the right direction of helping people find ever higher quality in our results.”

About 12% of U.S.-based queries would be affected by the change, Google said, and the changes would expand to non-U.S. users in the near future.

Google didn’t give examples of Web pages that rose or dropped in its rankings for certain queries, setting off a wave of speculation by professionals whose job it is to help sites rise in Google’s results.

“It has to be that some sites will go up and some will go down,” the Google engineers wrote, adding that sites with original content “such as research, in-depth reports, thoughtful analysis and so on” will move up.

Many sites rely on Web traffic from Google, and even a small drop in the rankings could have a large impact and potentially reduce revenue. On Friday some large content creators, such as HubPages.com and ChaCha.com, said they noticed significant changes to traffic for some of their pages.

Demand Media Inc., which recently went public and runs large content sites such as eHow.com and Answerbag.com, said “we haven’t seen a material net impact.”

Mr. Sullivan, the blogger, said an eHow page with what he characterized as “shallow” content previously appeared as the first Google search result when users searched “how to get pregnant fast.” Since Google’s change Thursday, the eHow page has dropped out of the top results.

Thursday’s move was an example of Google’s tremendous influence over the Web, which has drawn scrutiny from U.S. and overseas governments that have launched probes to see whether it is involved in anticompetitive behavior. More recently, some websites have complained that Google is placing links to its own services ahead of Google’s competitors.

Google says it acts in the best interest of users, and frustration by some sites is understandable.

“Google has an enormous amount of power to make or break businesses,” said Scott Jones, chief executive of ChaCha Search Inc., a question-and-answer site, who said he was seeing some negative effects from Thursday’s algorithm change, especially for Web pages on his site that have short, “bite-sized” content.

“It’s unfair, I think, that Google made some wide, paint-brush decisions here in their algorithm that didn’t take into account a site like ChaCha that does have unique content created at fairly high cost,” he said.

Paul Edmondson, chief executive of HubPages.com, which shares ad revenue with writers that publish Web content about a variety of topics from making scarves to Mexico’s Day of the Dead holiday, said it was too early to tell how his site, would fare under the changes.

Web traffic sent by Google to a HubPages article about nose piercing rose by 40% since yesterday, he said, while traffic to an article on “what happens if you abandon your home and let it foreclose” dropped by 80%.

Google said the effort that resulted in the latest search change has been underway for about a year. In order to learn which sites users find to be of poor quality, Google earlier this month began offering software for its Chrome browser that allows users to block sites from their search results if they deem them to be low quality.
More

* Digits: Google Engineer Explains Spam Issues

Once blocked, the sites won’t appear during future searches. Google on Thursday said that while it didn’t use data from the experiment to influence the changes it made to its algorithm, it found that the algorithm change covered 84% of the Internet sites that were the “most-blocked” by users.

One new competitor to Google, start-up search engine Blekko, relies on its users to weed out what they believe are poor sites in categories such as health, cars and personal finance.

“Overall Google has done a great job and there are very few cracks in the system,” said Seth Besmertnik, chief executive of Conductor Inc., a company that helps companies such as General Electric Co. and Federal Express rank highly on search engines. “But spammers are getting smarter and Google needs to keep getting smarter.”

Read more at WSJ

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