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Wednesday, June 24, 2009

6/25 Search Engine Journal

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Surf Canyon: Featured FireFox Extension for Search
June 24, 2009 at 4:26 pm

Surf Canyon is a useful FireFox extension that enhances your web search experience with recommendations based on your preferences:

The addon adds a tiny icon to each listing in SERPs; by clicking on it you will see “more sites like that one”:

surfcanyon

What’s more the tool adds relevant tags above the search results to refine your search.

You can control the addon behavior: specify web sites that you prefer and web sites you dislike. Then search results from that domain will be more likely to appear in Surf Canyon’s recommendations. Web sites from your disliked list will be removed from search results pages (for example, you may add Twitter or Wikipedia to see more results from them).

surf canyon preferences

Main features:

  • Available for Internet Explorer (IE6, IE7 and IE8);
  • Google, Yahoo!, Bing, Craigslist and Lexis Web (you are free to exclude any of them);
  • Customization: set the max number of relevant sites to be shown;
  • Odometer: keep track of how useful the addon appears to be.

Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal.

Surf Canyon: Featured FireFox Extension for Search



Bing Gains Major Paid Search Share in Two Weeks
June 24, 2009 at 1:34 pm

Here’s another Bing-related trend which Microsoft should add to the positive performance of Bing in just two weeks. According to Efficient Frontier’s latest analysis, Bing’s share of paid clicks increased to 13% from 8% prior to its launch two weeks ago.

This adds to several positive indicators we’ve reported the past two weeks such as Bing getting the number two spot in search market share even just for a day, as well as comScore’s data on Bing’s search penetration in the U.S. market. Never mind if Bing’s Xrank search trending has beaten Google Trends or not. The more important thing to look is the fact that Bing is showing some positive performance in the search industry.

But then  gain all these are preliminary data which can be useless once the search statistics for this month comes out.

Will Bing sustain this positive indicators? Or are these all products of user curiosity over Bing’s capability and functionality? Will Microsoft’s marketing and advertising campaign for Bing reap a sustainable condition for Bing as one of the major players in the search industry?

Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal.

Bing Gains Major Paid Search Share in Two Weeks



Twitter SEO - The Slow Death of Twitter Hash Tags
June 24, 2009 at 8:48 am

Hash tags are a fad.

Hash tags were cool for about 10 minutes. But then they started to remind us of IRC, Meta Data, and reading a book written in another language.

When Twitter hit the big time, just a couple months before the landmark “@oprah” show, all of the trending topics on Twitter were hash tags. It was new, it was cool, it was hip to know what a hash tag was. And if you used them properly, it meant you were twitterific at twittering.


Hash tags do serve a useful purpose. For example, a few months back there was an event called IM Spring Break being held not too far from where I live. I could not attend this event, but because of hash tags, I was able to follow the twitter-stream by searching #imbroadcast. I actually enjoyed watching the constant flow of tweets all relating to this event. The tweets were in real-time updating me on what was happening as if I was there.

I remember a specific period of about 5 minutes when a speaker took the podium. As he began his keynote presentation, a stream of first impression thoughts from individuals at this event flooded Twitter. It was as if I was seeing the presenter from 15 different people at the same time. It gives first impression a whole new meaning.

You cannot ignore hash tags, yet.

Hash tags are still used frequently, and more importantly, they are searched frequently. Therefore even if you believe them to be confusing, unnatural, ugly, or annoying, if you want to optimize your search engine efforts, you have to own them.

What are the main problems with hash tags?

  • #fb What in the world does that tag mean? Exactly. Often times when I read a hash tag, I try to pull some sort of meaning from the context. Most of the time I come up with nothing.
  • If you don’t use capital letters when you use more than one word, it is like watching a foreign movie without subtitles (Matchstick Men).
  • Highly abusive. Spammers use a trending hash tag to promote something completely irrelevant.
  • The hash “#” or pound sign, can create a conflict for developers.
  • THEY ARE UNNATURAL.

What are hash tags good for?

  • Hash tags have the ability to create a group of engaged Twitterers.
  • With a hash, it allows a less than stellar search feature to provide slightly more accurate results.
  • When used properly, they help a reader to better understand the meaning or purpose of a Tweet.

Over the past few months, we have seen the trending topics slowly migrating towards being natural keywords, as opposed to hash tag keywords. This is due to two things, people are using natural keywords at a much higher frequency, and because hash tags are being used less. I think you can call that natural selection.

How do you optimize tweets with hash tags?

Always keep in mind what purpose the hash tag is serving. Generally hash tags will only provide value if it is, or has the opportunity to be a trending topic.

I would define a trending topic as something that people will naturally want to talk about, but more importantly, it has to be something that people will want to read about, in real-time. Breaking news stories will always work well for this, because it has every component needed to be a trending topic. Another great example is a question that everyone has the desire to answer. There has to be a motivating factor behind your hash tag that will make the reader wish to re-tweet or respond.

e.g.

  1. Your best drunk text message… #DrunkText
  2. Breaking up in less than three words… #3BreakupWords
  3. I wish I was a… #WishfulThinking
  4. What is your favorite drink? #FavDrink

As you can see, most of those have a motivating factor and have the potential to become a trending topic because they evoke a sense of urgency in the response. It is a challenge to the reader. It is a private invitation to them specifically.

Everyone likes to talk about themselves, so a trending topic is often related to that.

I often see hash tags such as “#seo”, “#green”, “#eco-friendly”, and “#twitterbook”. What people don’t realize is that these are a waste of space unless timed perfectly.

Hash tags exist as one of two things, time-sensitive and time-insensitive.

Let me explain. In the current state of Twitter, there are certain hash tag keywords that will not drive any traffic at all. This is in part due to the hash tag is generally accessed by someone performing research, instead of looking for something in real-time. There is a huge difference between information that is not time-sensitive and information that is. Which is why newspapers are going under. Who wants yesterdays news today when yesterdays news was accessible yesterday? This of course is only applicable to time-sensitive information.

The idea of researching the tweets that exist in Twitter, where real-time is less important, is in its infancy. Expect this to change as websites index and organize these tweets into accurate SERPS.

I do not think anyone will disagree that indexing tweets and providing SERPS based on that is already a huge opportunity.

In conclusion, even though I think twitter hash tags are a dying art, they are not dead yet. If you are interested in Twitter SEO, you cannot ignore hash tags.

Stay tuned! And as always, I invite you to share your thoughts with comments below.

Joshua Odmark is a technology consultant at Simply Ideas LLC and also blogs for Performance Marketing Blog. Follow him on Twitter or connect with him on LinkedIn.

Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal.

Twitter SEO - The Slow Death of Twitter Hash Tags



Google Shares Best Practices for Making the Web Faster
June 24, 2009 at 8:22 am

Google has just launched Code.Google.com/Speed,  a new site for developers containing tutorials, tips and performance tools which can be used to optimize the performance of websites.

“Google Speed” contains various web development best practices culled by Google and is based on what the Google staff has learned in their web performance work online. Likewise Google is encouraging everyone who wants to make the web faster to discuss and share their own experiences.

Google has also looked into the various developments that emerged throughout the years which have affected the way we browse the web. These include stuff such improvements in HTML, Javascript performance, existing tools that made the web faster, and mobile broadband developments.

Some of the Tools featured on the site are:

  • Google’s own Firefox/Firebug add-on called Page Speed
  • AOL’s tool for measuring and analyzing web page performance called Page Test
  • Yahoo’s Firefox Add-On, YSlow which analyzes web pages and suggest ways to improve perfomance

The site also contains various tutorials such as GZIP compression, HTTP caching, web graphics optimization, PHP performance tips, and more. Proceedings of various Tech Events/Talk sponsored by Google were also included on the site.

Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal.

Google Shares Best Practices for Making the Web Faster



Microsoft Bing Adds Three Former Yahoo & Google Engineers to Team
June 24, 2009 at 8:04 am

If you can’t acquire them, just hire them! Microsoft, which made a play to acquire Yahoo via hostile takeover last year, has forged ahead and launched their new search engine Bing, while establishing a strategy of hiring former Yahoo Search engineers.

On Monday Microsoft hired VP of Operations at Yahoo Kevin Timmons, to head up their Data Center Services. At Yahoo, Timmons championed the building out of their data centers and infrastructure. Back in the day, Timmons was also a director for Geocities … the original user generated content “build your own website” social program from the 90’s.

More from the Microsoft Datacenters blog :

Kevin is known as a hands-on leader with a great grasp on the issues in his field and a keen interest in increasing energy efficiency. One of the key ways he has approached that challenge was by closely measuring efficiency at each data center and using PUE (Power Usage Effectiveness) as a key metric—a strategy that helped build more efficient data centers. Kevin also brings valuable experience and know-how in the field of data center site selection. Anyone familiar with our areas of focus in Microsoft data centers, especially around environmental sustainability, will recognize the great fit Kevin's experiences bring to the team. In sitting down with him and exploring these areas in depth, I've become increasingly excited about the industry experience Kevin brings to our team.

To add to the mix, Todd Bishop at TechFlash adds that Microsoft has hired Yongdong Wang, former Yahoo VP of International Search, who may be overseeing the International rollout of Bing.

Furthermore, Knut Risvik, who was a Google Engineering Director and previously worked at Yahoo as a Chief Architect after Yahoo acquired Overture, also joined Microsoft and will be serving as an architect for the Microsoft Search platform and infrastructure.

Microsoft is getting aggressive, I wonder if we’ll see some bigger names and other execs moving over to Ballmer’s Bing project throughout the summer.

Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal.

Microsoft Bing Adds Three Former Yahoo & Google Engineers to Team



Google Chrome Security Issues Fixed, Update Released
June 24, 2009 at 7:50 am

Google updated their Google Chrome browser yesterday with a new release (version 2.0.172.33) which includes a major fix of a critical security flaw in the browser. According to the Chrome Releases blog, Google Chrome had a vulnerability to “buffer overflow in handling certain responses from HTTP servers. A specially crafted response from a server could crash the browser and possibly allow an attacker to run arbitrary code. ”

Google said that the vulnerability made Chrome open to attackers who might be able to run code with the privileges of logged on users. If you use Google Chrome and you have the auto update feature turned on, it should update itself.

The security issue was found out by the Google Chrome team, and is documented in a thread at Google Code.

This is the second security threat update to Google Chrome this month.

Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal.

Google Chrome Security Issues Fixed, Update Released


 

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