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Freshly Brewed: Google Caffeine

Posted by: Olga Travlos Posted Date: 29/06/2010

On 8th June, Google announced the completion of its new web indexing system, Caffeine. Google created Caffeine to ensure that its search results would offer users the most up-to-date content for any given search term. What this means for your business is that the rewards for regularly adding fresh content to your website are now greater than ever before.  

Google Caffeine is Google’s new web indexing system. It is designed to enable users to find the most recent available information relating to their search term. Google says that compared to Google’s previous index, Caffeine produces search results that are 50% fresher.

Google Caffeine matters to your business because it affects the search results that Google provides. If a site has shown signs of recent activity, then Google will treat that site as more interesting than another site where there has been no recent activity. Google is therefore likely to award a higher rank in its search results to a company that has recently added content to its website than to a rival company whose website has remained unchanged for the past two years. And the higher you rank in the search results, the easier it is for a potential customer to find you.  

When people search the web on Google, they are not searching the web itself, but only the index of the web Google has created. Before Caffeine, Google used to update the main layer of its index every two weeks. The advantage of Caffeine as an indexing system is that it is updated continuously. Caffeine is a change ‘under the bonnet’ and won’t make the process of performing a search feel different to the user. But by removing the time-lag, Google can give pages where there has been recent activity higher scores, thereby helping users to find them. 

To stay ahead of your competition you need to keep on adding good quality content to your site – so keep those press releases, blog posts and new content rolling.

Mayday Mayday Mayday!

Posted by: Olga Travlos Posted Date: 29/06/2010

At the beginning of May, Google made a change to its search algorithm. The “Mayday” update concerns search results from long tail keywords – search terms 3 or 4 words long – and has led some sites to experience a 50% drop in traffic.

At the beginning of May, Google introduced a change to its search algorithm that some organisations found disturbing. Google modified the criteria it uses for selecting search results from enquiries using long tail keywords (search terms 3 or 4 words long). Although people do not use long tail keywords very often, they can still represent an important share of the overall traffic to your site. Because the change occurred around 1st May, it has become known as Mayday. 

Following the Mayday update, some sites were reporting falls in traffic of anything between 5% and 50%. Meanwhile, other sites were experiencing an increase. The reason was that Google had changed the search algorithm for long tail keywords to reward quality over relevance. For inquiries using long tail keywords, higher quality sites will receive the traffic rather than pages that are simply relevant.

Google’s Matt Cutts has explained that the algorithmic change is not just a blip. Instead, it is a carefully considered change to how Google assesses which sites are the best match for long tail queries, and “it’s not temporary”. Google’s mind is made up. What matters now is how best to adapt. The key thing to consider, says Matt Cutts, is “what sort of thing can I do in terms of adding great content, making sure people consider me an authority.” The Mayday update created panic in some quarters, but it also reminds you of the importance of maintaining a high quality website.

You can watch Matt Cutts’ explain the change:

Stars in Their Eyes

Posted by: Olga Travlos Posted Date: 09/03/2010

Google has recently announced a way of making searches more personal. What impact is this going to have on Search Engine Optimisation (SEO)?

When you perform a search on your computer, the search engine results pages (SERPs) that Google gives you are “organic”. In other words, the terms that appear highest on the list are the ones that Google judges to be of greatest interest for everyone in general.

In the SERPs, Google is determined to preserve the impartiality of its rankings. Yet in other situations, Google will try to provide you with what it thinks is going to be of most interest to you personally.

The latest innovation announced by Google will allow you to personalise your web search with stars. If you bookmark a page using the bookmark or star icon, then the next time you perform the search, the item will appear at the top of your results.

Here's where you find the bookmark/star icons:

google toolbar bookmarks


This is what the results would look like (using Google’s own example):
 google starred results


What impact might this have on SEO? The point of SEO is to get your company to the top of the page for a term that is relevant to your business. Will stars affect how Google perceives your site? Google has promised that the star search will leave Google’s organic search results unchanged. However, the stars will occupy the top position of search results on the page. 

Businesses already ask their website visitors to “Bookmark this page” or “Add to favourites”. I suggest you make sure that you include Google Bookmarks in the options of bookmarks for your site.

You can see Google’s article here http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2010/03/stars-make-search-more-personal.html

Search Engine Optimisation : The Good, The Bad and the Ugly

Posted by: Olga Travlos Posted Date: 19/02/2010
 Search Engine Optimisation: The Good the Bad and the Ugly Working in the Search marketing industry for the past 7 years I have come across a variety of opinions and methods of implementing optimisation for websites. To be honest there generally isn’t much difference between two good search engine optimisation people. The ideas, theories and opinions might differ, but the basics (The Good) are always the same. The Good What do I mean by basics? To start off with all optimisation starts with a good and thorough keyword research campaign, followed by a full review of the website in question and then a list of on-page changes. On-page changes referring to content within the relevant tags as well as the body content of the pages. The technical aspects of the sites are reviewed and suggestions are made on navigation, linking structures and so forth. Then the more complex optimisation (The Bad) has to take place, unfortunately in today’s world the complex pieces are also the most influential in terms of impact The Bad What do I mean by complex? Well, if it was that easy to explain it wouldn’t be complex! In essence for a site to be found and ranked in Google there needs to be a clear reason to the search engine, which I have to state is a robot, a machine without any feelings or any ability to make obvious connections, to rank one page above any other. One of the biggest factors in this is a ‘voting system’. The system is simply based on what other people, institutions and companies think of you, and this is picked up by Google via links into your site. Google view links coming into your site as votes of confidence, the more relevant a link is into your site, the better it is. Relevance is based on 2 main aspects, Why people are linking to the site and Who is linking to the site. The Ugly Why are people linking to your site? If a website contains content on farming equipment and then has a link to a computer manufacturer’s website, Google will view this with scepticism, simply because there is no relation and will probably view this as low relevancy link. However if the same farming equipment website has a page dedicated to the computer equipment necessary to manage the farming equipment electronics, the link could be deemed as more relevant.  Hence the question, why are people linking to your site? If a page with relevant content links to the site, Google will see this as a relevant link and will mark this up in terms of trust. If Google views a link as less relevant, it will mark the link down. Who is linking to the site? The bigger the site, the more relevance it will pass along when it links. If a site the size of the BBC decides to link to you, Google knows that the link comes from a reputable site and it will automatically score the links from this site higher. Unfortunately in this instance an old saying of “It’s not what you know, it’s who you know” comes into play. It is completely possible for a website with minimal optimisation to rank highly just because they have gained strong inbound links from big reputable websites. The whole process as laid out is part of the Search Engine Optimisers remit. Everything has to be looked at, analysed and planned, simply because none of this is easy. From the very basic to the most complex a clear strategy has to be in place, what am I trying to achieve, how will I achieve this , who will I target, how will I target them. This only comes with experience, trial and error and a little bit of luck. But as Gary Player once said, “The more I practice, the luckier I get”