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Another Google Search Algorithm Change

I read this blog today posted by Jay Greene from CNET.  Google has altered its algorithm again to help searchers find the most relevant results and the timeliest results.

Google alters algorithm to make results more fresh

Google altered its search algorithm today to bring in more timely topics, a move that affects about 35 percent of all searches.

The Web giant said it’s trying to surface the most relevant results to users, and with more and more real-time data popping up on the Net, Google changed its algorithm to find it.

“Given the incredibly fast pace at which information moves in today’s world, the most recent information can be from the last week, day or even minute, and depending on the search terms, the algorithm needs to be able to figure out if a result from a week ago about a TV show is recent, or if a result from a week ago about breaking news is too old,” Google Fellow Amit Singhal wrote in a blog post.

In June, Google completed its Caffeine Web indexing system that provided “50 percent fresher results,” the company said then. With that tool, Google altered the algorithm to better determine when to deliver those more up-to-date results.

So now, when users search, for example, “Occupy Oakland protests,” Google returns results that are news heavy, surfacing links to articles from newspapers that may be only minutes old. When it comes to recurring events, such as presidential elections or corporate earnings results, the new algorithm produces results that are most recent unless the search specifies otherwise.

“Different searches have different freshness needs,” Singhal wrote. “This algorithmic improvement is designed to better understand how to differentiate between these kinds of searches and the level of freshness you need, and make sure you get the most up to the minute answers.”

 

This post was provided by Sarah Schwitters, Chief Marketing Strategist at lodestar marketing group.  If you would like to improve your search rankings or need help understanding Google’s recent changes, contact digitalmarketing@lodestarmg.com.

 

 

The Dark World of Search Engine Manipulation

Another great article was published today that I felt compelled to share.  This one is quite important.  If vendors are promising you 1st spot rankings quickly on highly competitive words, you better find out how they plan to do it.  When Google catches you breaking the rules, whether you meant to or not, your company can literally vanish from the search engine.  With Google now controlling 2/3 of all searches, this could severely hinder your business!

That’s why lodestar marketing group employs proven and legitimate SEO practices.  We don’t take short cuts.  We don’t break the rules.  We work to provide the search engines what they need to understand the content on the web site while still providing a web site that suppports your brand.  Yes, it takes longer for the results.  Yes, it is more work to do it right.  But it is never worth the risk to cheat the system as you’ll see from the fate of JC Penney and Overstock.com.

If you want help with your search engine optimization and want to ensure you are doing it ethically while still getting great results, we want to hear from you.  Contact us at digitalmarketing@lodestarmg.com.

The dark world of search engine manipulation

McClatchy Newspapers

Published Tuesday, Mar. 01, 2011


When it comes to directing people’s attention, there has never been anything as powerful as today’s vast online search engines, and when it comes to search engines, nobody can touch Google, whose sites handle an estimated 88 billion queries a month, roughly two-thirds the world total.

Users don’t have any idea how Google decides the order in which it presents search results, and that ranking is the most consequential thing Google does. That’s because search engines may look far and wide, but their users do not. If your company doesn’t show up at or near the top of Google’s results, it’s invisible.

A survey last May by the online advertising network Chitika found that the No. 1 search result drew over one-third of all traffic the results generated – twice as much as No. 2, three times the traffic of No. 3. Being on the first page of rankings was critical. Even No. 10, at the bottom of page 1, drew nearly two and a half times the traffic of No. 11, at the top of the second page.

So any retailer that wants to reach customers online cares intensely about its rankings, and is eager for ploys to ensure prominence. Hence the business of SEO – search engine optimization. SEO is focused on figuring out Google’s rankings and giving Google what it’s looking for. Which is what? Only Google knows, and its search methodology is about as widely shared as the formula for Coke.

What is known is that Google puts great weight not just on traffic flows, but on how well regarded a particular site is, and tries to measure that regard by calculating the number, and to some extent, the quality of other sites that link to it. Google likes to think it is reflecting some prevailing judgment of a site’s value.

But that judgment can be counterfeited. One extraordinary instance, uncovered recently by The New York Times, involved JC Penney, the venerable Main Street retailer. Apparently, for months Penney was the top-ranked site if you searched for terms as disparate as “skinny jeans,” “home decor,” “area rugs,” “dresses,” and “table cloths.” Penney even pulled more traffic for “Samsonite carry on luggage” than Samsonite’s own site.

How come? Penney’s success was traced to an SEO consultant who had, essentially, contracted with more than 2,000 web pages that had no discernible purpose apart from linking to sites like Penney’s – for pay. Penney’s fortunes rose thanks to this virtual ballot-stuffing.

In a second case, The Wall Street Journal reported that retailer Overstock.com had been caught offering discounts to college students and faculty for linking to Overstock from various search terms, among them “gift baskets” and “bunk beds.” Overstock’s rankings soared because the links came from sites with the “.edu” suffix reserved for schools. Google apparently assigns great weight to .edu sites, since they rarely link to commercial entities and their endorsements are thought to be especially credible.

Google’s response in both instances was terrible and swift. It took undisclosed measures that, in Penney’s case, led to its average position for 59 search terms plummeting from 1.3 to 52 within two weeks. Overstock had been at or near the top for dozens of keywords, but within days had plummeted to the fifth or six page of results, the functional equivalent of vanishing.

The tales are disturbing on several counts.

-First, the vulnerability of the rankings to manipulation. With 300 million domain names to police, Google is preposterously outgunned.

-Second, the quiet, unchallengeable ferocity of the response. You don’t have to support fraud to agree with the Times reader who posted: “Was anyone else spooked by Google virtually eliminating a company from existence by removing it entirely from search results?”

-Third, the non-transparency of the whole search business. What could be more opaque? The retailers’ actions certainly seem wrong, but says who? If the principles guiding search shape public awareness in sweeping ways, shouldn’t we know what they are? Besides, Google itself routinely features its own spinoffs – Google Product Search, Google News and YouTube – high up on its results. Is that OK? Why do I get three “Google Maps” links on page 1 when I type in “driving directions?”

Now Google is incorporating recommendations from your social media “friends” to personalize the search results you get. Who authorized Google to help itself to that information? And precisely how will your so-called friends’ opinions alter the rankings you see?

Google is an extraordinary company, and its credo of “do no harm” is impressive. But it’s difficult to think of another private, profit-seeking entity that has ever exercised such vast power over what the world thinks about and pays attention to. That’s a profoundly public function, and with it comes an obligation of accountability that Google has so far bungled.

ABOUT THE WRITER

Edward Wasserman is Knight professor of journalism ethics at Washington and Lee University. He wrote this column for The Miami Herald. Readers may write to him at: The Miami Herald, 1 Herald Plaza, Miami, Fla. 33132; website: www.edwardwasserman.com.

This blog was posted by Sarah Schwitters, Chief Marketing Strategist at lodestar marketing group.  If you would like help with your digital marketing, please contact us at digitalmarketing@lodestarmg.com.

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