Archive for the ‘Search Engines’ Category

Optimizing for Bing, Optimizing for Google, is there a difference?

Friday, February 26th, 2010

We have had many clients ask us how Bing differs from Google and if there are SEO considerations to account for. Coincidentally, MarketingProfs.com gave a webinar last week with the topic of optimizing your site for Bing vs. Google and uncovering the differentiators. Google now has 70% of search market share while Bing is now around 10%. The 10% is in speculation depending on who you ask but we believe this 10% is the amount of search market share that MSN/Live search engines had before Bing was introduced. Bing’s search market share is anticipated to increase when and if the Yahoo! deal is approved.

While nothing earth-shattering, or new, was uncovered during the hour-long presentation relative to SEO we did take notice of a few observations in relation to how Bing displays several types of content and search engine results.

Let’s begin with the bottom line - Bing organizes and displays their data differently than Google does. Bing’s focus is on making travel and shopping related searches better for the user to make a decision (hence, the decision engine) while Google’s ultimate goal is to deliver the most relevant results for a specific search query no matter what topic. There are new and different opportunities that Bing offers if you are in one of these key industries (shopping and travel). While Bing will be able to gain in these areas we don’t believe SEO strategies should change dramatically. Following best practices, building a crawlable site and creating great content are still the keys to success with all search engines.

Here are some of the items that make Bing different from Google:

bing-bestmatch1) Bing’s “Best Match” or top result is manually chosen by an actual human, not algorithmically as is Google’s. Not every search will have a “best match” because of this manual selection. This human moderation (similar to DMOZ and Wikipedia) confirms the importance and relevancy of quality site content and as we all know, content remains king in all search engines. It also means that Bing may be a bit harder to game for a top ranking for anything other than a branded search. That is unless you truly are the most relevant, useful site for the target query.

2) Bing will show results from “their” web properties and third parties with which Bing has agreements such as MSNBC, Hulu, MSN, and others before anyone else’s. With Yahoo! becoming more of a media entity, this plays right into Bing’s apparent strategy. We are seeing how Microsoft is positioning this search engine to leverage their other properties as news and content sources. This could and most likely will have a huge impact on search relevancy, since the most relevant result won’t always be shown.

3) Bing’s image search likes absolute URLs as opposed to relative ones. (Absolute URLs are when the domain is in the URL like www.libertyinteractivemarketing.com/directory versus simply pointing to /directory) The application of this is that if an image is linked from another site, the original site will still get the visibility in image search. So don’t steal images, but if you do, make sure to host them on your own server.

4) Local ads on Bing are supplied by YellowPages.com. So, if you want your business’ text ad to appear on Bing local search you’ll need to advertise with YellowPages.com.

5) Bing Shopping is CPA-based (cost per action) and sorts results based on a combination of price, shipping and Bing’s cashback program. An important note: You can’t participate in Bing Shopping unless you are already an advertiser on Bing/MSNAdcenter.

A key element regarding personal privacy is that Bing indexes the Facebook profile pictures and photo albums of fans of pages (business profiles) and shows them in its image search with little regard for relevancy. bing-imagesSo, for example, if you search your company name on Bing, it may pull in pictures of people who fanned your page – and not necessarily pictures that are representative of the brand or that either party wants shown to the world. We find this extremely scary. If you do too, read this related article on Facebook pages now included in Google’s real-time results.

Have you noticed other differences between Bing and Google? We would love to hear how people are using Bing and other observations about the new “decision engine.”

Facebook and Google’s Real-Time Results: How will it affect you?

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

It was just announced that Facebook pages will now be a part of Google’s real-time results. There is still no way of knowing if or when your status updates will also start to appear but pay attention, this is a major game changer. If you thought changing your privacy settings on your Facebook profile was going to keep everyone on the outside, think again. Last week we sat in on a webinar on Bing’s search engine and one feature hit a nerve with us - how and from where Bing pull images into their results.

We took a closer look by searching our own company name “liberty interactive marketing” in Bing’s images tab and found that profile pictures of our Facebook fans came up for our very own company name.

bing-images

The key point to highlight here is that there is no such thing as privacy. There is only perceived privacy. There are loopholes. Kind of like when you join an association, purchase membership, or opt-in to any program - many companies use that “relationship” as a legitimate reason to contact you or loan out your informaiton. In this case, the relationship of you fanning a company page may be permission by proxy to Facebook then to Bing (given their new relationship with Facebook) to pull in any data they want….this includes your mug or at some point status updates.

While both Google and Bing are figuring out real-time search and what data makes sense to display as a result (primarily trending for now), Facebook is slowly opening up the gates of information and in my opinion, in all the wrong ways.

Facebook is taking the fun out of Facebook. I would really like to be wrong in this prediction, but this direction seems to be headed down the wrong road. Why?

Because of the unknown. Google plans on more than 550 updates to their algorithm in the coming year (they made over 450 in 2007), their search engine algorithm is smart, really smart. There is no telling how the engineers will figure out how to use this data and it may be at your expense.

Privacy is gone. Bing has proven that with its image display.

If this gets your blood boiling, read these articles for more search engine marketing dish:
Facebook Pages Now Part of Google’s Real-Time Results
How Google’s Algorithm Rules the Web

Free Non Profit Website Design Best Practices

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

web-site-bestpracticesWhile reading my dailies, I came across a fabulous article by Cameron Chapman on Smashing Magazine. Its focus was “Best Practices for Non-profit Website Design.”

And while I have no arguments about how helpful and resourceful this article is with regard to Non-profit Website Design, I do believe these best practices can be repurposed for nearly any organization looking to build a new Web site or update their current one.

A listing of Best Practices for Non-Profit Web sites are as follows:

  1. Make your site donor-friendly
  2. Make Your Site Media-Friendly
  3. Make Your Site Volunteer-Friendly
  4. Make Sure Your Organization’s Purpose is Immediately Apparent
  5. Make Sure Your Content Takes Center Stage
  6. Make Sure Your Website is Consistent with Your Other Promotional Materials
  7. Know Your Site’s Purpose Up Front
  8. Include a News Section or Blog

Find a breakdown for organizations that are not non-profit, on how to utilize these same Website best practices for your own company below.

Read the original and full article here.

If YOU ARE FOR-PROFIT organization, here are some Web site Key Takeaways and Thoughts from this article that can be utilized for your company:

  • Make your site donor-friendly
  • Whether you are collecting donations, selling a product or providing information your site needs to be easy to navigate and checkout. The checkout process can be collecting donations, moving consumers through an actual purchase process, or requiring them to sign up for a webinar, or fill out information to download a whitepaper - you need to make it easy and requiring too many steps and requesting unnecessary information can mean losing that potential customer.

  • Make Sure Your Organization’s Purpose is Immediately Apparent and Know Your Site’s Purpose Upfront
  • If visitors cannot figure out the purpose of your company or what you offer they cannot be turned into prospective customers. A cute logo and clever tagline won’t cut it. Make sure to include clear precise copy on all pages that informs visitors of what you offer, how to get more information and how it all works.

  • Make Sure Your Content Takes Center Stage
  • Content does not equal copy. Content refers to copy, videos, blogs, Flash elements, images, and other types of media. Consider the types of audiences coming to your site and the best forms of content to include on your site that appeal to many types of personas. From researcher to purchaser, focus on the main types of personas interested in your product or service offering and appeal to their purchase process. What key pieces of information need to be present to get them to the desired action (e.g. requesting more information, signing up for a trial or demo, checking out). Different pieces of content appeal to different users and finding the right mix of content while balancing design and creating clear goal/conversion paths is no small challenge. Measure and test everything.

  • Make Sure Your Website is Consistent with Your Other Promotional Materials
  • Take a hard and fast look at all on and offline materials. Cost efficiencies can be saved across the board by picking standard sizes, having image libraries, and all departments working from the same pool of resources. This ensures consistency across the board and that is the number one rule - consistency makes for success. Your brand identity will also be salvaged. In addition, make sure someone is assigned to managing your Web site and that they are made aware of all marketing initiatives both on and offline. There is nothing worse than having a press release sent out over the Internet and then visiting the actual company Web site for more information and there is little to no information on the product or service that was promoted, let alone the press releases hasn’t even been posted to the company site. You miss out on great search engine visibility opportunities by missing on such a simple web update.

  • Include a News Section or Blog
  • Don’t miss out on opportunities to become an authority in your area. You don’t always have to be promoting your products or services, think inside your box but with regard to end-user. What problems do they encounter that your product or service might help solve? Blogs and News Sections are opportunities to take advantage of ongoing search engine visibility as well as deliver valuable and relevant information to your audiences. They keep your site current and fresh and provide valuable insight into your companies work ethic and level of service.

photo credit: cogdogblog