Google’s competition is anyone connecting people with information

02.14.10 Posted in Search Analysis, Social Media by Barry

Got some time to spare? stick on a pot of cof­fee and have a browse through Google’s end of year report filed with the Secu­ri­ties and Exchange Com­mis­sion.

In a month where Google launched Buzz, this in par­tic­u­lar caught my atten­tion (page 15)

Com­pe­ti­tion

Our busi­ness is char­ac­ter­ized by rapid change and con­verg­ing, as well as new and dis­rup­tive, tech­nolo­gies. We face for­mi­da­ble com­pe­ti­tion in every aspect of our busi­ness, par­tic­u­larly from com­pa­nies that seek to con­nect peo­ple with infor­ma­tion on the web and pro­vide them with rel­e­vant adver­tis­ing. We face com­pe­ti­tion from:

• Tra­di­tional search engines, such as Yahoo! Inc. and Microsoft Corporation’s Bing.

• Ver­ti­cal search engines and e-commerce sites, such as WebMD (for health queries), Kayak (travel queries), Mon​ster​.com (job queries), and Ama​zon​.com and eBay (com­merce). We com­pete with these sites because they, like us, are try­ing to attract users to their web sites to search for prod­uct or ser­vice infor­ma­tion, and some users will nav­i­gate directly to those sites rather than go through Google.

• Social net­works, such as Face­book, Yelp, or Twit­ter. Some users are rely­ing more on social net­works for prod­uct or ser­vice refer­rals, rather than seek­ing infor­ma­tion through tra­di­tional search engines.

• Other forms of adver­tis­ing. We com­pete against tra­di­tional forms of adver­tis­ing — such as tele­vi­sion, radio, news­pa­pers, mag­a­zines, bill­boards, and yel­low pages — for ad dollars.

• Mobile appli­ca­tions. As the mobile appli­ca­tion ecosys­tem devel­ops fur­ther, users are increas­ingly access­ing e-commerce and other sites through those com­pa­nies’ stand-alone mobile appli­ca­tions, instead of through search engines.

• Providers of online prod­ucts and ser­vices. We also pro­vide a num­ber of online prod­ucts and ser­vices, includ­ing Gmail, YouTube, and Google Docs, that com­pete directly with new and estab­lished com­pa­nies that offer com­mu­ni­ca­tion, infor­ma­tion, and enter­tain­ment ser­vices inte­grated into their prod­ucts or media properties.

We com­pete to attract and retain users of our search and com­mu­ni­ca­tion prod­ucts and ser­vices. Most of the prod­ucts and ser­vices we offer to users are free, so we do not com­pete on price. Instead, we com­pete in this area on the basis of the rel­e­vance and use­ful­ness of our search results and the fea­tures, avail­abil­ity, and ease of use of our prod­ucts and services.

Nei­ther our users nor our adver­tis­ers are locked in to Google. For users, other search engines are lit­er­ally one click away, and there are no costs to switch­ing search engines. Our adver­tis­ers typ­i­cally adver­tise in mul­ti­ple places, both online and offline. We com­pete to attract and retain con­tent providers (Google Net­work mem­bers, as well as other con­tent providers for whom we dis­trib­ute or license con­tent) pri­mar­ily based on the size and qual­ity of our adver­tiser base, our abil­ity to help these part­ners gen­er­ate rev­enues from adver­tis­ing, and the terms of the agreements.

Kayak​.com cited above, are a rel­a­tively small com­pany with less than 100 employee’s. I’m not sure what they’ll be think­ing named as a com­peti­tor. Scared? or Flat­tered? or both. Don’t be sur­prised to see Google buy them at some stage this year.

This may go some way to explain Google Buzz, which has been thrust upon us like a Simon Cow­ell pop act. The thing about twit­ter & face­book as well as other great web­sites is that as part of the com­mu­nity you watch it grow and have a sense of belong­ing. Buzz cer­tainly does not have that feel and in my opin­ion is a clear sign that Google is los­ing it’s stran­gle­hold on the web (or is at least concerned).

Sim­ply put, Google want peo­ple using their ser­vices for what­ever func­tion they need the inter­net for in order to sell adver­tis­ing off, it’s not com­pli­cated but it’s sure to get very inter­est­ing this year.


Google Search Tracker: Update

06.13.09 Posted in Search Analysis by Barry

I’ve finally got some time to update my sim­ple Google Search Tracker script for Greasemonkey.

Script avail­able over on User​scripts​.org, with the main change being the dif­fer­ent way that Google is now dis­play­ing results.

javascript - Google Search_1244913666796


5 reasons why PPC is not for lazy unoptimised websites

04.05.08 Posted in Google Adwords, Search Analysis, Search Engine Optimisation by Barry

Last week, I was speak­ing at the sem­i­nar which cov­ered Search Engine Mar­ket­ing and Web Ana­lyt­ics, one of the mis­con­cep­tions that came up was that of the expla­na­tion of Organic v Paid Search.

It was black & whitely explained that web­sites listed organ­i­cally were opti­mised, while paid list­ings were lazy & unop­ti­mised!

Rather that the two meth­ods com­pet­ing with each other, I find they actu­ally com­pli­ment, and I’d always rec­om­mend a PPC cam­paign to assist SEO.

Here’s my  5 rea­sons to utilise PPC & SEO

  1. Wider Reach — PPC allows you to tar­get searchers which may not be pos­si­ble to do with SEO, as it’s impos­si­ble to opti­mise for every search term in every country.
  2. Con­ver­sion Opti­mi­sa­tion — PPC traf­fic allows you to con­trol the land­ing page for search phrases, this is extremely use­ful when analysing your con­ver­sion process, you can test a page which is only avail­able to your PPC vis­i­tors. Tools such as Googles Web­site Opti­miser or Crazy Egg are great in this sce­nario, this can then feed back into your main website.
  3. Brand Pro­tec­tion — with the recent changes to the trade­mark pol­icy on Google Adwords, your com­peti­tors may be bid­ding on your trade­marks. As you own the brand, you will most likely have a max­i­mum qual­ity score, with a min­i­mum cost per click for those terms. It also allows you to cor­rectly use the ‘Offi­cial Site’ or Copy­right / Trade­mark sym­bols in the ad text, increase click through rate and lower costs.
  4. Key­Word Research — Cur­rently the best key­word research tool for traf­fic in Ire­land is either using googles key­word sug­gester, or cre­at­ing an adwords cam­paign with exact/phrase match on a group of key­words and using reports to deter­mine the search pat­tern. The key­word place­ment report in Adwords should should addi­tional search terms that have trig­gered your ad. All this infor­ma­tion can be used to feed back into your SEO efforts, as well as lower your PPC costs by look­ing closer at the long tail searches.
  5. Instant Results — PPC can be turned on/off within min­utes, and allows you to instantly get listed, while SEO results may take a long time, and even then may not get that cov­eted page 1 listing.

PPC adver­tis­ing obvi­ously isn’t for lazy web­sites, and in many cases is vital to cre­at­ing a great web mar­ket­ing strat­egy.


How To Combat Google Adword Cookies Monitoring Your Search Analysis

07.18.07 Posted in Search Analysis by Barry

Recently I’ve been test­ing some new key­words, so my analy­sis of cam­paigns have been bor­der­ing on the obses­sive through ad copy test­ing and com­peti­tor analy­sis — look­ing out for minute changes and deter­min­ing pat­terns. I use a sim­i­lar opti­mi­sa­tion process as Rand­fish on SEO­moz.

Dur­ing my daily analy­sis I noticed that I would fre­quently get my ad plac­ing much lower than the Adwords stats were show­ing, I then tested the same key­words in another browser, with simul­ta­ne­ous searches across two dif­fer­ent browsers, returned very dif­fer­ent results, some­times rank­ing as dif­fer­ently as 15 places on the spon­sored link rankings.

Dig­ging a lit­tle deeper I found that clear­ing my browser cook­ies resulted in nor­mal order return­ing, and the ads plac­ing cor­rectly, this was ver­i­fied using the Google Ad Pre­view Tool.

So what exactly is stored through Google cook­ies ?, pos­si­bly search behav­iour on spon­sored link clicks — i.e if I havent clicked on the top 3 ads, does it replace them with oth­ers ? cer­tainly seems that way.

To ensure cor­rect test­ing, I’ve put together a Google Adwords Pre­view Plu­gin for Fire­fox, this adds a cus­tom search engine to the Fire­fox search engine list, which links into the Adwords Pre­view ver­sion of Google, and returns spon­sored links in the expected manner.

You can down­load the it from here — Google Adwords Pre­view Plu­gin.

Once installed it will show up as a new search engine, with a slightly greyed Google logo.

Adwords Preview Search Engine Plugin

Search queries now show spon­sored links cor­rectly, in their esti­mated posi­tion based on google rank­ing, and not your per­sonal search behaviour.

preview2.png

Another Sus­pi­cious Searcher -
Google​.com Shuf­fles AdWords List­ings: Results Return After Cook­ies Deleted


Real Time Search Query Analysis For Free

07.16.07 Posted in Search Analysis by Barry

I’ve been using a sim­ple tool on some small web­sites called 103bees.

It’s a real-time online tool for web­mas­ters, blog­gers and inter­net mar­keters that is highly focused on nat­ural search engine traf­fic ana­lyt­ics. It pro­vides tons of detailed sta­tis­tics and in-depth infor­ma­tion on the search terms that drive tar­geted traf­fic to your websites.

It’s a small javascript code insert (sim­i­lar to Google Ana­lyt­ics) and reports on search querys, allow­ing you to analyse what engines are refer­ring and the search term. The main fea­tures are

  • Lat­est Search Hits
  • Top Land­ing Pages
  • Rank­ings
  • Long Tail Analysis

And it’s free !
It also includes a sim­ple API if you need to inter­face with it, I’m hop­ing to do develop a cus­tom mashup in the future.

You can also pro­mote funny search terms

mars.png

Give it a go — 103bees​.com


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