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Wednesday, November 19th, 2008 Google, news, SEO Tools No Comments

Google Announces Search-based Keyword Tool

Yesterday evening, Google announced the release of their Search-based Keyword Tool (beta) (SBKT), a nice little addition to their ever expanding suite of free internet marketing and keyword research applications. Google’s SBKT suggests terms that are semantically related to the content of any provided URL – ones that aren’t currently part of an AdWords campaign associated with that particular site.

If you don’t run an AdWords campaign on the website that you’re doing KW research for, the tool can still come in handy by providing you with a list of related terms; similar to Google’s regular Keyword Tool, but with somewhat broader, yet highly relevant results. If, however, you are logged into your AdWords account when you perform the search, SBKT will display only the keywords that you aren’t already advertising for.

Google Search Based Keyword Tool

For each keyword or keyphrase displayed in the results, columns representing monthly search volume, competition, and suggested bids are offered, as they are in some of Google’s other tools. Some extremely valuable information is offered in the data column that displays what percentage of time you’re showing up in search ad spots for the AdWords campaign you’re running.

SEOs will be glad to know that Google says the Search-based Keyword Tool doesn’t generate keyword ideas from AdWords accounts associated with any websites, and that data is derived from aggregated and anonymous Google search data from Google users in several different countries.

Comments, as usual, are welcomed. Let us know what you think of Google’s Search-based Keyword Tool!

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Friday, November 14th, 2008 Google, news No Comments

Google Finally Publishes Official SEO Guide

Until this week, the closest Google has ever come to publishing anything on recommended Search Engine Optimization practices has been the well known and rather vague Google Webmaster Guidelines. Just the fact that they used the jack-of-all-trades-but-master-of-none term ‘webmaster’ hints at the rather limited potential value of the document to anyone that’s been involved with the industry for say, a few days. The guidelines Google Webmaster Central Blogare a great starting point for someone new to web development, but aside from advice and hints posted by Matt Cutts on his and others’ blogs, the public hasn’t ever had any Googficial (How’s that for a word – Come on Oxford and Websters, I dare you) documentation on how to get better website visibility in Google.

2 days ago, however, Google’s SEO Starter Guide appeared on the Official Google Webmaster (shudder – there’s that word again) Central Blog. Now in terms of the information value in the guide, I’d say it’s a step up from Google’s Webmaster Guidelines, but not by much. New to SEO or web development and need a reliable source of information on how to make your site more search engine friendly? Need information you can trust, since you are new to the game? Well here it is. Which brings me to the real value of these guidelines as far as SEOs and Internet marketers go.

Trust. We know that having the experience with the basic SEO practices outlined in the SEO Starter guide and far beyond is what really makes the difference in a competent Internet Marketing professional, and if there is even a single piece of information in this guide that you aren’t familiar with, you might want to reassess your worth to your clients. However, the basics of SEO, now officially outlined by Google in their guide, will help to take some of the mystery out of SEO for business owners when wondering whether what they’re paying for is actually worth it. Nothing in this guide is new to us, except that Google has finally put it’s stamp of approval of the most basic of SEO principals that we’ve all been using for a long time; and they finally refer to it as SEO as well. Potential clients often want to understand what basic steps you’re taking to help their internet presence in exchange for their hard earned money. Just the fact that Google has official documentation on the basics of SEO is a step in the right direction. Thanks Google.

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Friday, November 14th, 2008 Google, news, SEO Tools, Web analytics No Comments

Obama’s Campaign suggests “Yes, ‘Google Website Optimizer’ Can”

Obama's Internet Marketing Camapaign

By now it’s widely known that Barrack Obama’s superior internet marketing campaign surpassed McCain’s online strategy by fostering an efficient online community early on. Both of the campaigns took advantage of online behavioral targeting, using cookies set on visitors browsers to track what types of sites they visited, and displaying targeted ads to them on subsequent visits. BarackObama.com’s much higher traffic was complemented by social media platforms such as Facebook, MySpace, YouTube, and Wikis to Organize Volunteers, as well as reaching to various demographics with text messaging for younger voters, and succinct emails to older ones.

Obama's campaign uses Google Website Optimizer

Obama’s web team not only raised incredible sums in $30 and $50 increments, but also maximized their fund raising efforts by running multivariate conversion tests to optimize donations and minimize bounce rates.

Obama Campaign used conversion rate optimization

Obama’s Donations page utilized free Google Website Optimizer to test the most successful of a variation of t-shirt gifts on donations of $30 or more – and on the site’s home page, displayed variations of campaign images, in order to measure bounce rates.

It seems Political Campaign Internet marketing change is here to stay!

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Thursday, October 30th, 2008 Google, news No Comments

Google Now Indexes Scanned Documents with OCR

Scanned documents now join Flash and .pdf files on the list of non text based formats that are indexable by Google’s robots. In an announcement today on Google’s Official Blog, Optical Character Recognition (OCR) technology’s ability to convert images of text into actual text that can be searched and indexed. This significant new step in Google’s arsenal will allow for many sources of previously seemingly inaccessible documents on the internet to be readily available, and easily searchable to the masses.

Google’s previous methods of indexing scanned documents utilized page/file titles, and other unreliable sources of metadata in an attempt to index the search engine-unfriendly images. If your Google search does in fact return results that include a scanned document, you’ll still be able to view it in its original form as a .pdf file, as well as the OCR’d text version, available to you through a ‘View As HTML’ link

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Friday, October 10th, 2008 news, Social Media No Comments

Microsoft Research Unveils Social Search Engine ‘uRank’

uRank Social Search Engine

Microsoft Research has released a new social search engine prototype called “uRank”. Social search engines boast personalization features such as allowing users to move search results around to better suit their tastes, and share information with others.

uRank “…allows people to organize, edit and annotate search results…to better support people as they are exploring a topic, comparing information, keeping track of what they’re learning, and collaborating with others…”. Microsoft Research proposes to use these interactions to contribute to the perceived relevance of search results opposed to traditional algorithmic methods of search engine results indexing. uRank is currently accessible to US users only. Apparently they’re ‘working on that’.

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Saturday, September 27th, 2008 Google, news No Comments

Happy 10th Birthday Google

Google's 10th Birthday

11 years ago, Larry Page and Sergey Brin renamed their university search engine research project from Backrub to Google; registering the domain Google.com on 11 September 1997. When the 2 Stanford computer science grad students incorporated Google a year later in a friend’s garage on 7 September 1998, they undoubtedly had no idea that Google Inc would someday have close to 20,000 full time employees.

Check out the Google Timeline.

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