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Category: Search Engine Marketing
21 Jul 2010Google has launched some improvements to its borders for over 60 countries and regions in Google Maps (coming to Google Earth soon).
“Making Google’s mapping tools as accurate as possible is a complex process, especially when a map’s accuracy has both quantitative and qualitative aspects,” says Google Geo Policy Analyst Charlie Hale. “We receive spatial data of all kinds – imagery, boundaries, place names, etc. – from a variety of sources worldwide, and we review them carefully before integrating them into the best representation of a given location in Google Earth and Maps.”
“In the case of geopolitical features on our maps, the depiction of borders is something upon which local authorities, governments and internationally recognized bodies often disagree,” says Hale. “Our goal is to provide the most legible and accurate maps we can given the information available in these oft-changing areas of geopolitical disagreement. Like most maps, ours include symbology that makes borders and other geopolitical features clearer to users.”
With the update, Google says many borders will more closely follow natural boundaries like mountains and rivers. In some areas Google has changed the symbology of the boundary lines based on political treaties and agreements. In other areas, there is simply just more information provided.

To read this article in its entirety, click here.
Category: Search Engine Marketing
24 Mar 2010While at a recent mobile marketing and advertising event in Vegas, Diana Pouliot, the Director of Mobile Advertising at Google, made a few interesting comments. According to Pouliot, one third of all Google searches via the mobile web pertain to some aspect of the searcher’s local environment.
In addition, Google Mobile Ads Group Product Manager Paul Feng reportedly said, “We think of location as a hugely important signal.”
So just how important of a signal is location to Google? Feng may have been talking about ad relevance specifically, but we know it plays some role in organic search. Otherwise, people would not get different search results based on where they are, which has been the case for some time. Perhaps the real question is whether location will start carrying more weight as searchers increasingly turn to their mobile devices for a greater percentage of their queries.
Location is already playing a significant role in the way people are searching on their mobile devices, and not just with search engines. WebProNews had an interesting discussion with RateItAll President Lawrence Coburn at the Online Marketing Summit last month about how consumers sharing their location has in essence become a new way of sending out a generic query, one that is becoming more prevalent with the growing popularity of location-sharing services like Gowalla and Foursquare.
“The thing about Foursquare and Gowalla, and these check-in apps, is like, a single tap of your phone is a powerful piece of data. It creates a connection with the merchant (with a bar or a restaurant) that you’re at,” explains Coburn. “It tells your friends where you are, and then in the aggregate, it tells the services like Foursquare and Gowalla what places are hot. And then you can imagine, like a local coupon or a local ad network overlaid on top, where a business is having a slow Tuesday, and they can blast out to everybody in their neighborhood, and say ‘hey, we’re doing half off beers in our place RIGHT NOW,’ and they can decide that on the fly, and reach a community that’s right around them.”
Despite apps like these, Twitter now has location features, and Facebook is expected to have some very soon. That has to be considered a whole new ballgame, not only because of the popularity of these social networks, but their relationships with the search engines. The social networks are already becoming more integrated into search results through real-time search, as well as social search (not to mention the web in general through Facebook Connect, APIs, etc.). Given Google’s fondness for delivering relevant results and an increased rate of user location sharing, it’s hard not to imagine location becoming more of a factor in search than ever.
To read this article in its entirety, click here.
Category: Search Engine Marketing
11 Jan 2010Meta descriptions were once an important ranking factor when it came to organic search, until Google announced that they were no longer going to use meta descriptions in their search algorithms. However; recent developments in Google’s search algorithm have once again decided to take web sites’ meta descriptions as a ranking factor.
Now, your web site’s meta description can significantly affect your organic search rankings. Here is how:
In December 2009, Google announced that they would be tailoring search results based on a users search history, even when users are not signed into Google.
How does this work? All of the searches that a user runs, whether on Google or not, are stored in their browser cookies. This data is referred to as ‘Web History’ and Google uses it to customize your search results.
To learn more, click here to read the article recently published on Site Reference.
Category: Search Engine Marketing
8 Jan 2010Google CEO, Eric Schmidt, envisions a radically changed Internet 5 years from now. Some of his predictions include:

What do you think of Eric Schmidt’s predictions?
Category: Search Engine Marketing
30 Nov 2009Through ever-changing algorithms, search engines organically index and rank the web sites they crawl. It’s he name of the game in search engine optimization: find out what makes a page rank – and use that tactic until the search engine changes its algorithm.
The page ranking algorithm used by search engines is a set of rules, which can vary by search engine. Exactly how a particular search engine’s algorithm works is a closely-kept trade secret. It can be based on the web pages’ meta tags, keyword frequency, and more.
Now, Google has begun to work on a new ranking factor: site speed. The search engine will be looking at page load speeds of web sites and ranking them accordingly, meaning that old site pages that load slowly with clunky images may be ranked lower in the search engine results pages.
To read more on what web site owners need to know about page speed and search engine rankings click here to read an article that discusses this topic from Search Engine Watch.
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