Archive for the ‘search stuff’ Category

Wish I’d Said That

Friday, November 6th, 2009

Dammit, SEOGuy!  seo_guy_logo

Talking about best practices and integrity in the SEO world…

There are so many unscrupulous companies in this space who promise #1 rankings in 2 weeks or less, charging ridiculous fees and setting false expectations.

I found this while doing some research on domain name aliases, and even though this post didn’t exactly answer my question, (;-)) the principles stated were expressed about as well as they possibly could be.

Enjoy.

BTW. I found what I was looking for here.

KidWithMatches is the personal blog of Pete Eberbach, VP Director of Online Marketing & Technology with St. John + Partners.

Web 3.0 Thinking is In the Clouds

Monday, May 11th, 2009

Although pretty heady stuff for a simple blog like this, the Aspen Institute recently released an eBook on cloud computing and the affects it may have on society in the coming years.

daybreak_miami

Arguably the ultimate expression of the web, “the cloud” is defined by A.I. as “a vast, always on, accessible, broadband-enabled next-generation Internet that is fast approaching.”

It will be a time where applications and data become a shared and distributed cyber-sea of information, communications and services, and with this evolution comes a huge set of issues around the idea of “identity.” Defining identity, validating it, preserving it, making it hack-proof and building reputation around it are just a few of the issues examined in the report.

You can read the report for yourself, here.

The report concludes by saying, “The cloud will usher in a seismic shift in the locus of control in our culture, and it will have ripple effects in all walks of life—energy, the environment, national security, learning, health care, business processes, emerging markets and much more. The cloud is about open access, rapid delivery of services, the ability to scale quickly and the power of networks. Ultimately, though, the cloud story is not just about computing, communication or information but about empowering citizens.”

A pretty worthwhile read, I guess….

KidWithMatches is the personal blog of Pete Eberbach, VP Director of Online Marketing & Technology with St. John + Partners.

Google Widens Trademarked Keyword Universe

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

google_shush

Google announced yesterday that it will permit marketers to buy trademarked adwords in almost 200 additional countries beginning in early June.  This is a wide expansion of a policy currently in place for the US, Canada, UK and Ireland.  Google’s policy allows any marketer to purchase keywords of its competitors, so long as the content of the ads doesn’t violate trademark laws.

Google has battled this issue in the US for several years, and continues to do so in the case of RescueCom, a computer services firm that has a suit dating back several years.  Just last month an appeals court overturned a previous decision favorable to Google and returned the case to the lower courts.   A similar case for Louis Vitton was decided against Google in France in 2006, and France is not on the list of 190 countries that will get the new adwords policy.  It’s odd that Google has suddenly thrown open this issue, when the balance of decisions seems to be tipping against their favor, and the wider the expansion, the more likely additional suits will be filed.  Perhaps the drop in search spending overall is what’s driving them.

Needless to say, this is a huge issue.  If Google is forced to pay RescueCom for trademark infringement, it could potentially trigger a ton of similar lawsuits, and eliminate this income stream from its PPC business.

Stay tuned.

KidWithMatches is the personal blog of Pete Eberbach, VP Director of Online Marketing & Technology with St. John + Partners.

NOW I Get It

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

see_no_evil

Finally Google has explained how their ranking algorithm works so that everyone can understand.

At yesterdays Newspaper Publishers conference in San Diego, Google CEO Eric Schmidt ‘splained it this way:

“We’ve been careful not to bias it (rankings) using our own judgment of trust (i.e. links from trustworthy sites help the linked-to site more than less trusted sites) because we’re never sure if we get it right. So we use complicated ranking signals, as they’re called, to determine rank and relevance. And we change them periodically, which drives everybody crazy, as our algorithms get better. … The usual problem is you’ve got somebody who really is very trustworthy, but they’re not as well-known and they compete against people who are better known, and they don’t—in their view—get high enough ranking. We have not come up with a way to algorithmically handle that in a coherent way.”

So, if you can boost your links from sites with high ranking signals, keeping in mind that a large, well-respected site may or may not have higher ranking signals than a small but highly trustworthy site, as determined by a complicated algorithm, your site rankings may or may not go up.

Got it?

KidWithMatches is the personal blog of Pete Eberbach, VP Director of Online Marketing & Technology with St. John + Partners.

Crowdsourced Labor Just Part of the Pixazza Story

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

Pixazza went live yesterday, thanks to backing by Google, and a number of other investors.

Using a novel crowdsourcing approach, Pixazza employs “experts” across the internet to identify products in publisher’s photos and linking those to merchants paying to have their brands identified in the images.

According to the article in Cnet, advertisers such as Zappos, Bluefly, Eluxury.com, Shopbot.com, Overstock.com, and Macy’s have been involved in a test with Pixazza since last fall, and now have almost 2 MM assets across a variety of publishers sites.

Beyond the crowdsourcing element, however, there are a couple of parts of this idea that are interesting, namely the increasingly blurred line between advertising and editorial matter, and the time-sensitive nature of the imagery creating a conflict between fresh content and fully monetizing each image.

Regarding the blurred advertising/editorial line, there’s a clear question about who will be making the editorial calls in the future for the sites carrying such advertising opportunities. When the photo is the centerpiece for an article, and the photo must incorporate paid sponsors’ products and be tagged in advance to capture maximum revenue while its still fresh, the scales have to tip more toward the advertising department to dictate what stories are “worth” running.

And in regard to the fresh content issue, publishers may be prone to keeping a story front-and-center longer than normal to maximize revenue from the images within it, at the sake of long-term site visitor erosion due to the content becoming stale.

Certainly an interesting concept, and one that bears watching. However, I think the ultimate success of this model will be to push the sponsor ID process and tagging upstream into the original photo shoot, and add this as part of an “enhanced buy” to either an adwords or display campaign.

KidWithMatches is the personal blog of Pete Eberbach, VP Director of Online Marketing & Technology with St. John + Partners.

Google Street View Part of Cops 2.0

Friday, January 9th, 2009

I know a lot of people hate the invasion of privacy of Google’s Street View. They don’t like the idea of someone driving by filming their neighborhood, or the ease of accessibility of scoping out your property.

On the other hand, here’s a pretty interesting upside of Street View from an article yesterday in Search Engine Land.

Apparently a girl was kidnapped by a family member, and police in Massachusetts tracked the girl via cell phone GPS, and then verified her location and setting via Google Street View.

Very Web 2.0 meets CIS. Nice job, Officer Neale!

Here’s the original article.

KidWithMatches is the personal blog of Pete Eberbach, VP Director of Online Marketing & Technology with St. John + Partners.

YouTube Second Largest Search Engine?

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

Amazing.

Not that the popularity of YouTube is lost on anyone, but when ComScore reports that YouTube video searches account for one-quarter of all searches on Google, it underscores how far Yahoo and MSN trail in search market share.

It also equates to YouTube being the second largest search engine on the web after Google.

I missed the ComScore release, but saw this while reading the Pondering Primate.

The potential for monetizing this environment is incredible as you can read further here, in the words of the original author, Scott Shaffer.

How they work out the revenue share is going to be the trick. YouTube provides the environment, but I may own the content. How do we split?

The intellectual property battle gets even more interesting if the content is a mash-up I created. The original author is suddenly going to become a lot more interested in protecting material where revenue is involved.

I envision legal issues aplenty as this takes shape. Oh, if only I’d listened to mom and become a lawyer……

KidWithMatches is the personal blog of Pete Eberbach, VP Director of Online Marketing & Technology with St. John + Partners.

ComScore Validates Online Ad Effectiveness

Monday, December 15th, 2008

Over the past couple of years, it’s become increasingly difficult to defend display advertising effectiveness. With CTR’s falling to less than .1%, and industry averages as low as .03% range, marketers rightfully ask whether this investment makes any sense at all when money is so tight.

ComScore

Last week ComScore presented a study at Wharton that should give marketers another way to look at display advertising.

Titled “How Online Advertising Works” ComScore found that display advertising provided lift of:

  • +46% in marketer’s site visitation
  • +38% in brand search queries
  • +27% in brand online purchases
  • +17% in brand retail purchases

We’ve been recommending display advertising as a replacement for certain television dayparts and to reach individuals with lower TV viewership tendencies. In most cases, the percent spend for display is somewhere around 10% of clients’ budgets.

Considering the reach potential of display advertising, particularly when compared to search, display should continue to be part of most clients’ overall media mix.

KidWithMatches is the personal blog of Pete Eberbach, VP Director of Online Marketing & Technology with St. John + Partners.

Search Trademark Lawsuit, Version 15.3

Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008

Several years after the courts decided in Google’s favor in a trademark dispute with Geico and others for using competitive trademarks in the triggering of paid ads, Yahoo and Google remain mired in trademark infringement suits over this issue.

Yahoo recently asked that its ongoing suit brought by American Airlines be moved to California, which again brought the existence of the suit into the press.

Looking back over the past several years of litigation and the outcomes of those judgments, the recurring theme seems to be that the ad trigger is not being viewed as a trademark infringement, but the use of the competitors’ trademarks in the ad copy is being seen as such.

Conservative companies will probably want to avoid this altogether and not buy “challenger” type positioning. However, we’ve been counseling our clients who are trying to grow market share to buy ad triggers but definitely avoid using any trademarked text.

KidWithMatches is the personal blog of Pete Eberbach, VP Director of Online Marketing & Technology with St. John + Partners.


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