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Posts Tagged ‘Google’

Great new keyword discovery tool from Google

Monday, October 12th, 2009 by cicero

One of the major tasks of a SEO practitioner is to find new and related key phrases (or keywords) for a web site being optimized for search engine performance. While the Google AdWords tools have many useful options to do this, Google released a new tool right under our noses to help us to do that.

Once you have done a search and have a search result page, you will see a link ‘+ Show Options’ at the top left of the search results (and the number of results on the right hand side of the same page.

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(more…)

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1-800-GOOG411 – Google’s 411 Service

Saturday, April 12th, 2008 by cicero

Sometimes the online world intersects with the off line world to provide you with a pleasant surprise.

I had a chance recently to use Google’s 411 service. I was on my way to a doctor and it started raining. Anyone living in the Washington DC area knows that the DC drivers are good weather drivers. One drop of anything and they freak out and loose it. So there I was, 3 miles from the doctor’s office, 5 minutes before the scheduled appointment time and probably 15 minutes away in the chaotic traffic.

I tried using my iPhone browser to look up the doctor’s telephone number without much success. Then I remembered reading about Google’s 411 service. I called 1-800-466-4411 or 1-800-GOOG411. Their voice response system is excellent, recognizing what I wanted over my accent and the road noise. Two minutes later they connected me to the doctor’s office – all at no cost to me. I was sort of expecting them to play an ad while I was waiting to be connected but it did not happen. I am sure that the brains at Google will find a way to monetize this service. The system did after all know exactly what I was looking for and could have played me a well targeted ad.

What a pity that the doctor’s staff did not have the same respect for me and my time. I walked in 5 minutes late to find that he was 70 minutes behind schedule – for a 10 minute appointment. A call (or text message) to inform me that I could come in 45 minutes late would have been nice!!

A description of the GOOG411 service can be found here.

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How many ways to skin a cat?

Saturday, April 12th, 2008 by cicero

Last night as the cat came racing up the stairs mieaauing at the top of her lungs looking for somebody to play with, the phrase “There is more than one way to skin a cat” came to mind. The meaning of this saying is that there is more than one way to accomplish your goals. So this morning I was wondering exactly how many ways there are to skin a cat? I consulted the yellow pages to find a cat skinner. I soon realized that being a cat skinner was probably not something you would want to advertise. So I turned to the only other source that could possibly find the answer to that question – “the Internets” or more specifically, “the Google”, Ask (I bet you that Jeeves would have been able to find me the answer back in his day), Yahoo and Live Search.

Here are the results:

Google: No clear answer but a lot of questions

google-skin-a-cat1

Yahoo: Many ways. There is even one solitary sponsored link – which shows you how idiotic dynamic keyword insertion can be.

yahoo-skin-a-cat

Ask: Two ways and a Thousand ways. The “Narrow your search” and “Expand your search” have some pretty gruesome details!

ask-skin-a-cat

Live Search: 50 Ways and two sponsored Sites

live-search-skin-cat

So my winner is Ask.com. Plenty of technical help on doing it as well as two definite answers. So let me print the instructions. I wonder if I can sell a cat skin on EBay?

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Where did Google get that?

Thursday, February 28th, 2008 by cicero

Ever wondered where Google got the information it displays in it’s search results for a site from? I recently bumped into some information about the very subject. I found it useful as it hinted at what you can do to improve the quality of what is displayed for your site.

Since Starbucks deprived me of my favorite drink for 3 hours last night, let me pick on them. For the search “Starbucks Coffee” the following is displayed:

Starbucks Search result

So where does this information come from?

Well first let me start with the disclaimer. Like everything related to Google search, this information can change at any time and it is true most of the time.

Note how the search terms Starbucks coffee gets BOLDED throughout the results.

The title “Google Homepage” is the title of the indexed web pace as found in the <title>….</title> HTML tag (<TITLE>Starbucks Homepage</TITLE>). Make sure you put something sensible in the title tag, not “Starbucks Homepage” but perhaps “Starbucks – Home of your favorite specialty coffee”.

Next comes the snippet: “Starbucks Coffee Company is the leading retailer, roaster and brand of specialty coffee in the world. The Company’s other brands enhance the Starbucks “. This will normally taken from the contents of the HTML Meta Description tag. If this is not interesting enough or Goggle thinks there is something more interesting on your web page, it will grab this, even if it means putting it together from multiple places on the page. So the lesson is clear – Put something sensible in the Meta Description tag:

 

<meta name=“description” content=“Starbucks Coffee Company is the leading retailer, roaster and brand of specialty coffee in the world.

The Company’s other brands enhance the Starbucks Experience through best-of-class products, including Tazo Tea Company and Hear Music.”>

So what happens if this tag is not there or Google can’t read your web page (it may be down)? Google will consult the Open Directory Project to find some description for your business from there. So the lesson to be learned is: Make sure you add your site to Open Directory Project with sensible descriptions.

Or Google may just grab something that looks interesting from your page and put it up as the snippet.

Next we get the “Stock quote for SBUX”. Google recognizes Starbucks as a publicly listed company and adds this. If Google recognize an address for your company, it might also add a “View in Google Maps” here.

“www.starbucks.com/ – 25k -CachedSimilar pagesNote this”

Next comes the URL of the web page for this result (www.starbucks.com/) , the size of the page (- 25k) and a link to the last Google cached version of your page, other pages that Google think may be related to the subject matter on your page and the Note This which will make a copy of this result in the Google Notes application (-CachedSimilar pagesNote this)’. If you click on the Cached, you will see the date of the last Google crawl on the page.
The next section is the Site Links. These gets automagically identified and classified by Google algorithms. Google will change the link name to some standard names that it uses, for example Nutrition may be called Ingredients on your site. Google will recognize this information as Nutritional information and create the link that you see here. I have not seen any documentation on the different Site Links that Google will create and how it recognize these on your site.

Last but not the least we find “More results from starbucks.com »“. This is to prevent one site from dominating the search results. It will list only a few links and group the rest under this “More results from..” link. his ensures some diversity in the search results so that you see more than just the top ranked site on the first results page.

I hope that this throws some light on how the search results are made up and how to improve the quality of your result somewhat.

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