News
From StepForth Search Engine Placement Inc.
Wednesday, December 3rd, 2003
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| Highlight
of the Week: Google's Florida Update |
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The impact of Google's Florida Update has not been fully realized yet but, with reports from some of our clients who have been hurt, the damage will be extensive. Literally hundreds of thousands of websites have seemingly disappeared from Google's listings, most of whom enjoyed a Top10 placement before the massive update which started on November 16th. Like most retailers, ecommerce sites that have faded from the listings needed a good Christmas season to remain viable into the next year and many of them staked their sales plans on a their previously strong placements at Google. The fallout will be noticeable, particularly among small businesses who's advertising options were limited by small business budgets. small businesses, however, will not be the only companies facing an uncertain future because of the Florida Update. When the SEO community starts receiving calls from the mainstream media and people who are not clients, asking what is wrong with Google; one knows that Google itself has a problem that goes far beyond their data centers. As one of the pioneers of the web, Lee Roberts of The Web Doctor points out, "It was word-of-mouth that generated their popularity because people could find what they were looking for. Now, we only find sites with less quality content and less sites that offer what we want."
The Florida Update encompasses the most substantial changes to Google's famed ranking algorithm in the young company's history. There are several theories as to why Google forced this update. Some say that Google is trying to force small businesses to join their highly profitable AdWords program by making such a comprehensive update just before the Christmas shopping season. Others say that Google has always used the weeks around the US Thanksgiving holiday to make changes in the hopes that the sudden decrease in traffic over what is often a 4-day weekend will give their engineers enough time to introduce a new algorithm, (and fix any minor errors), without causing massive disruptions to their normal users. A third theory, (the one I lean towards), states that Google was simply tired of being gamed by the growing cadre of less ethical players in the SEO sector and has simply changed the rules overnight by applying this new algorithm. Whatever the reason, the damage is being done and now advertisers and web-users want to know what to expect next. Unfortunately, that is not an easy question to answer as Google does not comment on any changes to their algorithm, therefore the only thing we can do is offer experienced and educated guesses.
I suspect that the folks at Google know they have a major problem on their hands and are working to fix it. We have seen MAJOR spider activity from Google-Bot in the past 48-hours and see evidence that another Google-Dance is currently underway. We have seen updates to the algorithm in the past. The most recent happened earlier this summer and the one before that was in October 2002. Each time Google augmented its algorithm with a new feature or filter, massive dislocation was temporarily felt across the commercial web. Both times, however, Google began producing relevant results within a matter of weeks. The new filters added to this update were too comprehensive and penalized sites that Google couldn't have been targeting on purpose. Again, I suggest that Google's engineering staff knows this, and if they don't, their customer relations and PR departments are most certainly telling them. I expect to see parts of this filter retained and applied to the formula that eventually evolves into their new algorithm but I simply can't see Google keeping this algorithm, continuing to serving up spam, and throwing its hard-earned reputation out the window. Regardless of the number of MBAs they have on staff, Google's brain trust is simply too smart for that.
Google is not in the business of driving websites out of business. Google exists to make money by providing the most relevant listings possible, a goal they are clearly not achieving. As Lee Roberts stated above, Google was built on (and, implicitly can be brought down by), word-of-mouth advertising, a fact that can not be lost on the management at Google. Google is not in the extortion business and has in fact, built its reputation on being above reproach in the separation of paid advertising (AdWords), and the general free listings. I have a difficult time excepting the theory that Google is simply trying to increase AdWords revenues, or increase its own perceived value before issuing the expected IPO next quarter. In reality, what I think we are seeing is Google trying to reclaim its power when it comes to choosing how it will rank websites. Think about this update as a pendulum. Before the update happened, the pendulum had swung to one extreme where, with enough hard work, some could make Google do almost anything they wanted it to. Now, with the application of the Florida Update, Google has pushed the pendulum back to the other extreme. Eventually, and based on past observation, the pendulum will find its way back to the middle. As for those of us adversely affected by the Florida Update, StepForth's best advice is to continue making minor changes to your site as normal. We do not advise a full reoptimizaton at this point, a task that would not likely produce strong results before the end of the purchasing season anyway, until the SEO sector has an honest handle on what is happening at Google. As a wise and wonderful person recently told me, "... you can't push a rope." |
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Important ©Copyright Note: viewers are welcome to post the content from StepForth Weekly newsletters
but we do require credit in the format that follows: Article by <author>, StepForth Search Engine Placement Inc. |
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Major
Player Update:
AOL Aims at Spyware :: Google and Overture Limit Drug Ads, but Only
in Paid Advertising
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AOL is taking aim at one
of the underbelly areas of the Internet, SPYWARE. Also known
as scumware, spyware is often unknowingly downloaded piggybacking
on other pieces of software such as file sharing software,
Kazaa. Machines infected with Spyware transmit their every
move to the maker of the spyware which often uses the information
to serve pop-up advertising based on the topic being looked
at. Bundled in AOL's new "9.0 Optimized" package
is a feature that will allow users to identify and eliminate
advertising and other forms of spyware. This indicates a growing
awareness among computer users and programmers who are demanding
to be free from an unscrupulous industry that according to
industry watchers has grown by 13% over the past 12 months.
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Google and Overture have both moved to limit paid pharmaceutical
advertising from unregistered online pharmacies in reaction
to a Food and Drug Administration opinion that they could
be held liable for deaths or injuries caused by unregulated
drugs sold from advertising on their systems. Filtering out
non-registered online-pharmacies from their paid advertising
programs is easy. Limiting their access to the free-listings
is much more difficult, if not impossible. A search for Diazepam
(Valium) on Google produced dozens of sites willing to sell
the powerful downer without a prescription. Similar results
can be found on most other major search tools. |
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| In the Client Spotlight
this Week: Whistler Accommodation @ The
Whistler Chalet |
Are you thinking about heading to Whistler BC this year? If you
are a skier or snow boarder, chances are you have at least thought
about it. Whistler is considered the #1 ski resort destination in
North America and has recently been awarded the right to stage the
2010 Winter Olympics. Located in one of the most beautiful areas
on the planet (British Columbia's Coastal Mountains) and close to
Conte Nast's favourite tourism destination, Vancouver, Whistler
Blackcomb is a vacation destination that will leave a lasting impression
for years to come. If you go, you'll have to stay somewhere and
StepForth client Cam Leyner has the space in the form of a large,
comfortable, ski-in/ski-out chalet. Check out his Whistler
Chalet and book the skiing vacation of a lifetime.
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| Weekly
Quick Tip: PPC Advice: Don’t Forget About
the Missplelling(s) |
Whether
you are achieving top placements across the engines for all
your main keywords, or are having trouble cracking the top
30, tapping into traffic generated by misspellings can sometimes
be a valuable addition to your search engine marketing and
paid placement campaigns.
By focusing on your main keywords, it is easy to forget that there may be some very common, and in some cases highly searched misspellings for your keywords. For example, if you manage a small hotel, 'accommodations' would obviously be a main keyword for you to target. A quick check on overture shows 'accommodation' with 86,499 searches for October, which would defiantly be a prime target, but take note of the common misspelling, 'accomodation.' If 5% enter this incorrectly, that's more than 4,300 searches a month on overture alone! Let's say just two percent of these result in a click to your site, that's nearly 100 visitors. That may not sound like a lot, but its still 100 additional visitors that weren't there before. Keep in mind not only I am pulling the 5% and 1% numbers out of the air, this would only account for one search engine. The actual numbers could be much higher!
You don't want a highly searched misspelling to pass you by. In many cases targeting the misspelling of a keyword, although searched less frequently, can direct more traffic to your site. Not only is it typically easier to achieve placements on misspellings, but if you are in the top 10 surrounded by a bunch of irrelevant results, chances are you will draw the majority of clicks on the search of that misspelling. |
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| The Net Reality: US
Tax Dollars at Work and in Some Cases, working against US |
The US General Accounting Office October report revealed that
the Pentagon has not properly monitored purchasers of its surplus
chemical and biological equipment. Such items, which could be
used in the production of chemical or biological weapons could
have easily found their way into the hands of terrorists who,
ironically would have bought them from the US military.
In the same vein, the Defense Threat Reduction Agency has been
using a web-cam to monitor activities in a factory on the Scottish
Isle of Islay that, in the DTRA's opinion resembled activities
at a chemical weapons lab. Turns out, the factory produces single
malt whiskey.
Thanks to Chuck Shepard's News
of the Weird for re-enforcing our faith in military
intelligence.
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do not hesitate to call the StepForth staff:
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