Sunday, November 30, 2008

Yahoo Launches “Vertical Lens” Search Through BOSS

Yahoo announced an expansion to the BOSS technology named “vertical lens” technology. In short, this allows developers build their own vertical search engines using Yahoo’s search technology, through BOSS. This new technology is replacing Yahoo’s old Search Builder tool.

When we questioned Yahoo as to why they dropped Search Builder for BOSS, Yahoo told us:

BOSS vertical search engine is more powerful. Not only it can support Search Builder’s functionality, it has the following features

* It gets “structured” content from customer sites to allow searchers to navigate and refine their searches.
* It gets proprietary content in real time; the content is searchable immediately
* It builds a vertical lens of the web for the customer and blends the results from this lens with the customer data.
* It customizes ranking based on customer needs: ranking can be recency based, popularity based, or social based

Personally, I have been a Google Custom Search Engine user, but I am very interested in giving Yahoo’s solution a try on some of my sites.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

YouTube Defaults Videos In HD Format: But Forgets Embed Feature

YouTube announced that all videos on their web site will now be in the wider format HD format, 16:9 ratio. The YouTube player is now 960 pixels wide, as opposed to the standard format of 4:3 ratio. 4:3 aspect ratio videos will continue to play in the wider format, but YouTube has added black borders to the right and left of the video, to fill that space.

YouTube has a help document describing how to upload better quality videos. It includes using MPEG4 (Divx, Xvid) format with MP3 audio and a video resolution of 480×360 or higher with a frame rate of 24fps or higher.

Below is an embedded version of me covering the news on video. Note, the default embed code still uses the old 4:3 aspect ratio. Why not give the new format or at least an option for it in the “customize” section?

Here is the default embed code, converting my 19:6 ratio to a 4:3:



Here is when I use code by a third party to make it in HD format

Monday, November 24, 2008

Google Page Rank - What Do You Know About it

Whether you are a search engine optimiser, a web master or you simply want to know how search engines work, you need to know about Google page rank. This article explains how Google determines trusted sites and elaborates on some of the factors in detail including the PageRank algorithm.

Page rank, an introduction

Google uses the ‘page rank algorithm’ amongst many other factors to determine which web pages are displayed at the top of search results. Expressed in a range from 0 to 10, the algorithm essentially ‘confers’ ranking from one page to another. Thus, for example, if a page rank 6 page links to you and there are no other external links on that page your page potentially gets a page rank boost of up to 4.8 (only a maximum of around 0.8 of the page’s own rank can be conferred). The reality is that the conferred ranking is distributed across ALL links on that page so a page rank 5 page with 5 links on it confers at most 0.8 page rank to each of its linked-to pages.

In practice, page rank is something the webmasters tend to obsess about, frankly because it is one of the few visual measures of ranking provided by Google, other than of course the presence of a site at the top of the search engine results pages (SERPs). Page rank is, in fact, a measure of . . .page rank. Many webmasters rigidly refuse to trade links with sites with lower page rank than their own, regardless of relevance. This is a mistake.

There are a good many page rank 0 websites that appear at the top of the results for relatively competitive terms. Equally some high page rank sites don’t appear for their target keywords. All of this indicates that, as you may expect, page rank is but one of many ranking factors in the Google algorithm.

The Google algorithm has developed over time and is far more complicated than it used to be. For example trusted sites will have higher search rankings and Google is known to have had teams hand reviewing high traffic and ‘major brand’ sites. The ranking that really matters is overall ranking in the SERPs. Over the last few years many methods have developed to improve a page’s rank. Today, Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) is the practice of promoting a site’s overall search ranking by using a combination of various legitimate techniques.

Link Building

Google’s page rank and indeed your overall position is based on how well linked a site is. Link building is the process of creating (on your own site and on other people’s) relevant links to improve a page’s SERPs ranking. The more relevant sites that link to a site, the higher it will rank for relevant search terms. In contrast, having random or off-topic links to a site will not really improve its search ranking and may indeed harm it, particularly if you have returned or ‘reciprocated’ those links. This is not to say that reciprocal linking is a bad thing (contrary to the opinions of some in the industry).

Google still rewards on-topic reciprocal links provided that they are properly acquired. Decent, on-topic links with relevant terms in the link text or anchor text from legitimate sites should create sustainable long term ranking. The focus here is on relevance and the ranking of the other site in the SERPs — not on whether it is a PR5 site or not.

On-Page Content and Code Optimisation

Early search engines used to heavily rely on META tags - these were created by the web designer to describe their own site and write their own keywords. However since these are easily manipulated (and abused), modern search engines such as Google index or crawl pages’ content and determine their own descriptions and keyword relevance based upon on-page content in combination with META tags, keyword density, the use of heading tags and so forth.

Designing pages to contain only relevant content to a subject is thus vital for good SEO. Each page should try to be specific to a particular topic (and include relevant keywords) but of course link to other topics. Generally it is important to make the first section of text in a page concise and relevant to the content of the rest of the page. The importance of fresh, unique, regularly updated content cannot be overstated.

Friday, November 21, 2008

Google to shut down Lively by end of 2008

Google has decided to shut down Lively , an online tool that allows users to create 3D (three dimensional) virtual chat rooms where they can invite friends and chat with them online. According to the company, Lively will not be available after December 31st, 2008. Lively was launched in July 2008.

“It has been a tough decision, but we want to ensure that we prioritize our resources and focus more on our core search, ads and apps business. Lively.com will be discontinued at the end of December, and everyone who has worked on the project will then move on to other teams,” Google has said .

Niniane Wang, an engineering manager at Google, had developed Lively as a part of Google’s 20 per cent project that allows the company’s employees to spend one day a week working on projects outside their day-to-day responsibilities.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Five tips for creating SEO friendly Flash

Ready to optimize Flash content using SWFObject 2.0? Here are five tips to help you get started. But before you jump ahead, remember that while Flash accessibility programming has become the best means to get your Flash content recognized by spiders, the fact still remains that when it comes to website design for search engine performance, textual content still reigns supreme.

Include traffic-driving, keyword-based messages. Understand the keywords your target market is searching for, and feature them in the messages within your Flash content. If replicated in Flash replacement content, these keywords have the potential to drive traffic to your website.

Emphasize language over images. When deciding on your Flash design scheme, remember that while language can be replicated in replacement content, the same cannot be done for images. Therefore, whenever possible, leave your images out of your Flash content (you can optimize image files separately) and focus on content that can be replaced and recognized by engines.

Use videos that contain content that can be “replaced.” Customer-engaging video content with keyword-rich messages can now actually help stimulate search engine visibility if it is replicated in text form. Just remember that if your video primarily consists of dialogue, the “spoken words” must also be available in readable form to qualify to be “replaced” in text form.

Include links in replacement content, If your Flash content features links to other important parts of your website, make sure to include them in the Flash replacement content, making them visibile search engine crawlers.

Avoid spam tactics. Make sure the replacement content made available for search engines is an accurate representation of the Flash content that is made available for users.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Google SMS Search now offers internet like experience

Google India has launched a newer version of its SMS Search service that allows users to SMS their query to 9-77-33-00000 at the cost of a regular SMS and get instant answers. According to the company, the new Google SMS Search service is available across all operators on both GSM and CDMA mobile phones across India.

Google claims that its new SMS-based search service works just like its internet search and can offer cricket scores, stock updates, Indian Railways train schedules, PNR (train ticket) status, horoscopes, movie show-times, latest news, flight status, weather information and facts & figures. Google SMS Search service can also work as a local business search, dictionary, calculator and currency convertor.

“No longer do you need to remember complicated strings to put before your query, you can search as if you are searching on Google web search – we will do all the hard work to understand your query and give you the best results on SMS,” Google India has said.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Google Hosting Time-Life Photo Archive, 10 Million Unpublished Images Now Live

TimeWarner and Google have announced that starting today Google will make available millions of images from the Life Magazine photo archive. The vast majority (97 percent) of these images have never been seen by the public (they were sitting around in physical envelopes). These are hard-copy photographs that have been or are being scanned by Google and will be hosted by Google. They will show up in Google.com and Google Image search results. All these photos are available in high-resolution (5 and 6 megapixels).

The images will be free to use for “personal and research purposes” but will be digitally watermarked to prevent unauthorized or unlicensed commercial uses. There are links to appropriate contacts for those who want to use the images commercially.

The images are labeled by subject(s) and organized by decade and category. They can also be searched by photographer and date. In other words you can search for all images by a particular photographer in a particular year or decade.

Why would TimeWarner do this? The company merchandises the photography and there’s a link on every page to a Time page where people can purchase the image:

Today about “three million images” are present, according to Google’s RJ Pittman, and roughly seven million more will be added as they’re scanned over time.

The photos are accessible through a dedicated front door but are also integrated into the core image search index. Pittman said that working on this project for roughly a year has yielded benefits and improvements that will be integrated into Google image search as a whole. He added that Google is looking to make image search, including the interface, better and suggested that the Life archive represents something of a preview of how Google image search could develop over time.

Google isn’t monetizing these images specifically at the present.

Facebook launches new feature to remind users of upcoming birthdays

Social networking site Facebook has added a new feature that can remind users of upcoming birthdays of their friends via an email notification. “If you opt in, you will receive an email on the weekend summarizing the upcoming birthdays of your friends for the next week,” according to Facebook .

“That’s good news for all of us who want more birthday information. It’s bad news for Birthday Alert and its clones that already do that on Facebook,” writes Michael Arrington on TechCrunch . “Birthdays are big business. Bebo founders Michael and Xochi Birch started their social network Bebo with a simple birthday reminder service. That service had 100 million users at one point and still brings in $4 million per year in revenue from e-cards and gift purchases. Bebo was funded in the early days from birthday reminder revenue.”

Monday, November 17, 2008

YouTube launches ad program to enable video creators promote their videos

Google-owned video sharing site YouTube has launched YouTube Sponsored Videos , an advertising program that enables video creators to promote their videos and make it easier for people to find them. According to the company, YouTube Sponsored Videos is currently available only in US, “but we're working to bring it to other countries soon.”

The new advertising program has automated tools that allow content owners to decide where they would like their videos to appear, place bids in an automated online auction, and set daily spending budgets. Then, when people search for videos, YouTube will display relevant videos alongside the search results. These videos are labelled as ‘sponsored videos’ and are priced on a cost-per-click basis.



“Just as AdWords provides people with relevant, non-obtrusive advertising, we hope that Sponsored Videos will provide useful, engaging content, accessible to advertisers of all kinds,” Matthew Liu, product manager, YouTube, has said . “We think this is a great first step for offering users, partners, and advertisers search marketing solutions on YouTube.”

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Search In Pictures: Yahoo Still Partying, Google Censorship & Yahoo Posters

In this week’s Search In Pictures, here are the latest images culled from the web, showing what people eat at the search engine companies, how they play, who they meet, where they speak, what toys they have, and more.

Yahoo’s Oktoberfest:



Fiesta Yahoo! Purple Power 2008:



Hot Yahoo Car:



Google Maps Censorship Protest:

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Google’s Site Search Gets Faster; Yahoo’s Goes Away

Google has upgraded its Site Search tool to give users more control over the frequency that Google spiders a site. But, if you think this is something that will help your site’s performance on Google.com search results, it won’t.

Site Search is Google’s on-site tool for individual websites; you use it to add a search engine to your own website. The new feature, On-Demand Indexing, lets site owners tell Google to index their site by clicking a button, rather than waiting for Google to do it on its own schedule.

A Google spokesperson tells us that this has no impact whatsoever on a site’s indexing and ranking on the main Google.com search engine:

“This feature allows site owners to update search results on their website On-Demand, by adding them to a special, separate index for their own site. Pages indexed with On-Demand Indexing do not impact the ranking or indexing of pages on Google.com.”

There’s more on Techmeme about Google Site Search.

Meanwhile, it looks like Yahoo’s site search tool, Yahoo Search Builder, has been taken down. It used to be available at builder.search.yahoo.com, but that URL now redirects to Yahoo Search. We have an email in to Yahoo, and will update this post as we learn more.

Gmail now offers voice and video chat facility

Google has introducing Gmail voice and video chat that enables users to have free voice and video conversations right from within Gmail. According to Google, the new video chatting from Gmail is as easy as sending an instant message.

“We have tried to make this an easy-to-use, seamless experience, with high-quality audio and video -- all for free. All you have to do is download and install the voice and video plugin and we take care of the rest,” Google has said .

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Six Things You Might Be Doing Wrong (And How to Fix Them)!

I touch a lot of sites every month -- some small, some large, some that we built, and some that were done by outside firms. In doing a wide variety research into what is and isn't working for a small business Web site, I find the most frequent issues fall within the following six categories.

1. Duplicate Content

There are a few types of duplicate content. One of the most common I see is duplicate page titles and meta descriptions.

Many times this problem is actually created innocently -- repeating the brand name on each page as the page title or just reusing one meta description for all pages on a site. Search engines will see the duplicate meta descriptions and sometimes judge a page as duplicate before they get to the actual page content. This happens more often when there isn't very much supporting text on the page.

Beyond giving search engines the wrong impression about your site, you're missing a key opportunity to optimize this page for a search phrase that will bring good qualified traffic to your site.

Many times duplicate content isn't created on purpose. Many different software platforms might create duplicate content without you even knowing it.

If your site is built in WordPress, you could be innocently serving archive and category pages that duplicate content on individual post pages of your site. WordPress is a great platform, but a bit dangerous if not set up correctly. Do some reading, and find a forum like the Search Engine Watch Forums to help you customize your Web site to eliminate duplicate content issues.

2. Working Without Keyword Research

Keyword research is the foundation of good SEM. Don't handicap your rankings and CPC before you even start by guessing what keywords you should be using. This research should be done before building a Web site if possible. A variety of keyword research tools can give you insight into what your audience is looking for. Wordtracker and Keyword Discovery have free versions. Try the tools at SeoBook or the Google AdWords keyword research tool.

3. Landing Traffic on the Wrong Page

If you're advertising via paid placements it's extremely important to land your traffic on a page that is designed, or at least targeted, to serve the needs of the searcher. I see a lot of PPC ads and banner ads that land the searcher on the homepage -- a page that isn't set up to give that searcher what they're looking for.

For example, say I'm searching for "3-bedroom Hilton Head Rental." If that ad lands me on the homepage, then I have to go searching for something I've already told you I'm looking for. The most targeted page for that PPC ad should be the page that lists all three-bedroom rentals in Hilton Head.

4. Ignoring Link Building

If you're trying bring traffic to your site naturally (without PPCs), getting the right keywords on the right pages is only a portion of the job. Google's algorithm weighs incoming links quite heavily -- but not all links are the same.

If you're putting keywords on your pages but not building links to those pages with good link text, you're hurting your chances at ranking as a means to increase organic site traffic. There are a ton of different ways to link build. I recommend reading Search Engine Watch's Link Love columns by Sage Lewis and Justilien Gaspard every week for great tips.

5. Obsessing Over Rankings & Page Rank

These are two very different issues -- but because so many site owners obsess over both means they're linked together in this article. Being number one for a term isn't your goal -- sorry, but that's not where you should focus your energy. Having a PageRank of 6 is also nowhere near your goal.

Are you making money? Is the return on the money you're investing in search making you exponentially more money? Obsessing over the little green bar (which isn't updated very often) or the rank of your listing will give you an ulcer -- and position three can make you just as much money, and in some cases even more, than position one can. I'm not saying rankings are irrelevant -- because logically being in the top six on page one is your goal -- but if you're third and obsessing over first, then you're obsessing over the wrong things.

6. Set it and Forget it Mentality

It's short-sighted to think you can optimize your Web site and leave it be. PPC accounts and ads that are written and left to their own devices can cost immense amounts of money -- with no return if they aren't monitored.

There is no "magic formula" that allows a number one ranking if you follow these three rules and leave it alone. Some sites need higher keyword density -- pages optimized for very competitive keywords may need more quality links to achieve the traffic you need to make money online.

These issues are all fixable -- they're just the six I see most often. It's important to know the strengths and weaknesses of what you're doing and get the issues that are holding your online business back out of the way. SEM is an ongoing process that requires art and science -- invest the time to do it the right way.

Google Ad Planner now accessible to anyone with a Google account

Google has made its free online media planning tool Google Ad Planner , which was till now available to select agencies, accessible to anyone with a Google account.

According to the company, Google Ad Planner helps agencies to improve their media planning process by letting them know unique users, page views, and other data for millions of websites from over 40 countries.

Google Ad Planner can also help users identify websites their target customers are likely to visit and define audiences by demographics and interests. It can also allow users to generate aggregated website statistics for their media plan.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Sify launches Sifymail WIYI powered by Google

Sify Technologies has launched a new mail service called Sifymail WIYI (World In Your Inbox), powered by Google. Sify had earlier signed a deal with Google under which Google Apps suite of communication and collaboration tools, including email, chat and online documents, would power Sify mail and chat, as well as other applications using the Google Apps platform.

According to Sify, Sifymail WIYI will offer its users a 7 GB mailbox, faster downloads and effective spam filters. It will also provide simultaneous chat, advanced search, Sify Documents, Sify Spread Sheets and Sify Calendar all accessible from the inbox. A wide range of widgets and customizable windows will let users to personalize their inbox to become virtually their home page.

Venkata Rao Mallineni, head of portals and consumer marketing, Sify Technologies, has said, “With internet applications and tools evolving rapidly, we felt the need to add value to Sify users by providing a one stop platform for all their Internet needs.”

“The new Sifymail WIYI is a perfect blend of email and applications that will not just enhance the user’s experience with us, but benefit them functionally. For the first time ever, all this functionality is enabled from their inbox, making it their home page on the Internet,” Venkata Rao Mallineni has added.

Google pulls out of its proposed ad agreement with Yahoo

Google has decided to end the ad agreement it signed with Yahoo in June 2008, following anti-trust opposition from the US Justice Department. The agreement, if implemented, would have given Yahoo the option of using Google to provide ads on its websites and its publisher partners' sites in US and Canada.

“We feel that the agreement would have been good for publishers, advertisers, and users -- as well, of course, for Yahoo and Google,” David Drummond, senior vice president, corporate development and chief legal officer, Google, has said.

“However, after four months of review, including discussions of various possible changes to the agreement, it's clear that government regulators and some advertisers continue to have concerns about the agreement. Pressing ahead risked not only a protracted legal battle but also damage to relationships with valued partners,” David Drummond has added.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Google Trends

Google trends is a tool that enables you to see what topics are popular in Google search engine over the years. The information about user searches are stored, sorted and presented in easy to understand way.

Google trends is a great way to follow trends and user behavior over a long period of time. It’s also a good way to see when you should start prepare special holiday promotions, start a contest or introduce a new product.

Looking on user behavior may help you predict what is the best time to make the right move and when can you expect to gain the most from your actions. It also gives you a general idea on user preferences based on search volume of keywords.
Examples:

Valentines day - see how soon should you start promoting your seasonal products,

Firefox vs. Internet Explorer - check how fast did Firefox gained popularity over past years and became more popular than Internet Explorer.

Google Trends website: http://www.google.com/trends

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

What Can the World Expect from President Obama?


















Today is the first day of the next era in America. The U.S. has chosen as its President-Elect Barack Obama, after the most exciting and galvanizing U.S. presidential election in recent memory. The partying will continue for weeks - but now comes the rolling up of sleeves and the fulfilling of promises. If Obama puts his policies where his pledges are, what are the environmental consequences? There are so many challenges we face; here, we take a look at the green ones.

Appropriately for a campaign conducted with such enthusiasm, energy has underpinned everything - and no wonder, when fuel is becoming a problem in itself, never mind its complicated relationship to food. The United States of the next few decades needs to find ways of ridding itself of an unhealthy dependence on unsustainable energy sources - and to undertake a sustainable, ethical approach towards renewable ones. Here's how the new Democratic government intends to tackle this formidable challenge:

A reduction in national oil consumption by at least 35% (or around 10 million barrels a day) by 2030 - and by the same year, a reduction in national energy usage of 50%.

A new Clean Technologies Deployment Venture Capital Fund, supported by $10-15 billion per year for the next 5 years, and an overall investment of $150 billion into energy technology (and therefore green collar employment) over the next decade.

By 2025, a quarter of all energy consumed within the United States must be from renewable sources
Despite supporting the proposed Biofuel Security Act of 2006, Obama has publicly acknowledged the problems with biofuel. "Food comes first", he says, although it's not yet clear what this means in practice.

Both presidential candidates agreed on the need for nuclear power - however, McCain was in favor of a huge investment of 45 new reactors. Unimpressed, Obama has outlined his plan of supporting and maintaining existing plants, but with the emphasis on investing in new energy sources.

"And I will invest $15 billion a year in renewable sources of energy...to create 5 million new energy jobs over the next decade - jobs that pay well; jobs that can't be outsourced; jobs building solar panels and wind turbines and a new electricity grid..."
- Barack Obama, 27th October 2008

The other eco-issue of the presidential race has been pollution.
Both candidates agreed that failing to ratify the Kyoto Protocol was a major blunder - and were also of one mind that the government should invest in an emissions trading program. However, Obama differed from McCain in insisting that 100% of emission credits should be auctioned off, ensuring that all pollution is paid for by the people that produced it. (Something Al Gore is sure to like.)

On top of improving the Corporate Average Fuel Economy standard to 43 miles per gallon, Obama also intends to reduce vehicle greenhouse gas emissions by 5% in 2015 and 10% in 2020 - a statement he made at the Detroit Economic club (you can watch it here).

Overall, Obama's campaign pledge was to reduce national greenhouse gas emissions 80% by 2050 - a striking contrast to McCain's 60% below 1990 levels by the same date.

If these proposals become reality, they would be unprecedented. Support for them and for Obama has been remarkable. Carl Pope of the grassroots environmental group the Sierra Club - an organization notoriously at odds with previous governments - has declared his support for "the strongest set of positions any candidate has ever offered".

For a man allegedly from Krypton, Obama seems remarkably comfortable with the color green. His administration has 4 years to turn these visionary promises into something tangible, and that's the real challenge - but right now, there's plenty to be optimistic about.

Online matrimony in India may be worth $63 million by 2010-11

US-based EmPower Research has published a report which states that the online matrimony industry in India may reach 21 million registrations with revenues of $63 million by 2010-2011. According to EmPower Research, the popularity of online matrimony services in India has grown mainly due to convenience and cost-savings.

The report, titled ‘A Web Partner for Life’, identifies the key challenges, such as online safety concerns among Indians and back-office, scaling processes that the Indian online matrimony sites could face while transforming themselves potentially into more powerful portals for lifelong services. The report also outlines how these challenges can be met and resolved.

Kyung Han, managing partner, EmPower Research, has said , “We see e-matrimony sites having an advantaged and much stronger position in India’s e-commerce environment. If e-marital sites can extend the trust gained by identifying a spouse/partner for a subscriber to many other, lifelong services, the e-matrimony industry may attain very strong, web loyalty among the Indian population. This is significant given the future potential of this market.”

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

The Need for HTML Knowledge in Link Building

When you think about the skills it takes to do link development your first thought probably isn’t “coding” is it? However, as we see more template-based sites and sites administered by people who don’t have much coding knowledge gain authority, you’ll potentially want to think about paying a bit of attention to at least basic HTML.

As you may have gathered, particularly if you’ve been link building and needed to approach a blog owner, not everyone has a site because he or she is adept with code. Now, you will find some blog owners who’ve chosen a blog package for various reasons, people who are quite fantastic coders but simply wanted to set something up quickly, have ease of maintenance, etc. What you will mostly find, at least according to my experience, is people whose knowledge of HTML isn’t all that fantastic, which isn’t at all surprising, considering the fact that these blog systems have been developed for ease of use, even for the least technical beginners. They are the great equalizer.

Here’s the issue with this sort of thing: blog owners can be your bread and butter, at times, depending upon your industry, and there are cases when you are going to be the only person on earth capable of explaining to this person about how to insert a link to your site. Sounds easy enough, right? It’s not, actually. I’ll start by detailing a conversation that one of my link builders had with a very, very sweet blog owner who obviously hadn’t a clue about how to do what we wanted.

A link builder made contact with this blog owner who has a truly spectacular blog, the kind of thing that, if it’s in any way motivated by anything other than the simple desire to write and spread ideas, is simply undetectable. This blog, on a scale of 1 to 10 with 1 being obviously done just to get rankings and/or traffic and 10 being done for the joy of blogging, would be a 10. Well, a conversation was started with my link builder, who happens to excel in the art of communication, and a deal was struck, with the link going live. Thus, the problem began…

The link was made live, as I said, but it was without a doubt the most obvious and horribly placed link that I have had the privilege to see. It stuck out like a flashing banner, only with less panache. We discussed how to handle this and another link developer actually went to the trouble of using Photoshop and a spray-painted arrow to indicate to this lovely blog owner EXACTLY where we wanted our link, so as not to appear too obviously “obtained” for a client. It didn’t hit home. The blog owner, not understanding HTML, couldn’t figure out how to do what we wanted.

And why would she be able to, anyway? This is a woman who has a blog because she enjoys writing about certain issues, not because she’s a coding genius. If blog software wasn’t so easy to use, she may never have started a blog. She isn’t alone in this regard, and it’s these types that can generate the best content out there.

Even on the sites that aren’t template-based, you can’t assume that you’re off the hook and that the site owner is code-savvy, of course. In the end, if you want the link and you want it placed in a certain spot, you need to be prepared to do things such as dig into the site’s CSS and HTML and figure out how to make it happen. Coding a link seems so simple, doesn’t it? However, let me assure you that there really are a thousand ways to mess it up. Even if you take the time to send over the code exactly as you’d like it, you can’t be sure that it will come out the way you want. As a link builder, you become the project manager of each link and it’s your job to ensure that it goes up and meets the requirements, whatever that takes.

Thus, my argument for knowing just a tiny bit about how to code…as you can see, it sometimes takes a bit more than simply telling or showing someone where you want a link. Some of your best sites are going to be run by people who will need you to hold their hand for the entire process, and if you really want the link, you’ll need to do it.

Google and Yahoo Revise Ad Partnership in Hopes of Winning Over DOJ

Google and Yahoo have revised their search advertising partnership in the hopes of winning over the DOJ. Primarily, the deal has been reduced from 10 to 2 years and a cap has been placed that would restrict Yahoo to only being able to bring into 25% of their search advertising revenue from the deal with Google.

It's unlikely that shortening the deal will qualm the fears of advertisers. Robert Liodice, president of the Association of National Advertisers, which opposes the deal, told the New York Times. “If a deal can’t survive long-term scrutiny, what’s the benefit of allowing it for the short term?”. Still, keeping Yahoo alive second place competitor in the search market is ultimately good for advertisers. As Mike Masnick over at TechDirt wrote, "We're still waiting for a clear explanation of how this deal will actually negatively impact consumers, but some people still insist it will. For those who believe so, let's ask a simple question: how is this any worse than Yahoo disappearing from the marketplace? Because if the company doesn't do something soon that may be what we're looking at."

Monday, November 3, 2008

Google Confirms RSS For Web Search Results

Google has confirmed for Search Engine Land that they’ll soon start offering RSS feeds for web search results. When it happens, the RSS feeds will be an extension of Google Alerts which currently only allow notification by email. The addition of RSS alerts was first picked up by Amit Agarwal who found it mentioned in an October 1st Wall Street Journal article where author Katherine Boehret wrote, “In about a month, Google will begin delivering these alerts to users via feeds, as well as emails.”

In an email today, a Google spokesperson told us: “While I can’t be more specific about an ETA, I can confirm the launch.”

Google Alerts offers email-only notifications on results from News, Web, Blogs, Video and Groups.

Google is currently the only major search engine not offering RSS feeds of web search results.

AOL Launches Local Events Search: When.com

AOL is unveiling When.com this morning. It’s a local events site powered by Zvents. When.com deemphasizes the AOL brand but will become part of the “AOL Local Network,” which includes MapQuest, AOL Cityguide, AOL Travel, etc. There will also be an When.com widget soon.

When.com uses IP targeting to determine default location, but offers personalization when users register.

Zvents content is also integrated into MSN Cityguides. Yahoo has Upcoming, its user-generated events site. Google Calendar allows publishers to add events and allows users to discover/search for them. It’s not clear to me at the moment how widely that’s used, however. Users, publishers and venues can also add listings to When.com.

What’s interesting about Zvents, among other things, is that the site is trying to define “events” broadly to include local retail sales and other non-traditional event occurrences.

Google Going Down Under?; Times Selling About.com?; Latest Ad Outlook; Yahoo Offering ‘Deceptive’ Ads

Australian media are reporting that Google recently sent a five-person crew to Australia to investigate the idea of building a data center there. According to Australian IT, some Google services cost more in Australia due to the need to route data to and from the U.S. and other countries. Says Google Australia spokesman Rob Shilkin: “While we’re investing in our Australian operations, we haven’t made any decisions about whether we’ll locate a data centre here.”

Gawker.com says the New York Times might be looking to sell About.com to help payback more than $1 billion in debt. The tip actually comes from Mahalo CEO Jason Calacanis, who told the This Week in Tech podcast, “They’ve been trying to sell About.com, from what I understand.”

It seems like every Search Biz these days has to include an outlook for online ad spending in the face of the global economic troubles, and this column is no exception. On All Things Digital, Peter Kafka recaps recent projections from several industry watchers.

On a very related note, Silicon Alley Insider reports that ad rates dropped 11% in Q3 this year. Particularly hard hit were music and entertainment, young adult, and social network sites. News and reference sites, on the other hand, saw a 36% increase.

And lastly, ITworld points out that Yahoo, by allowing publishers to block ads based on their level of “deceptiveness,” is essentially admitting that they allow deceptive ads — which are illegal in the U.S. The ads in question are ones that, for example, pop-up a fake Windows warning dialog box. The article includes comments from Yahoo and others, including FTC spokesperson Rick Quaresima, who says the agency would be “more concerned with the cases of deceptive advertising that could cause tangible consumer harm or consumer injury.”