Posts Tagged ‘SEM’

February 12, 2010 | Steve Chitwood

Google all a buzz over social media

Surprised? Of course not. Google has been dipping its elephant-size toes in the social media pond for some time. Remember Orkut? However, it appears the testing-the-water phase is far behind us. Today’s announcement of the acquisition of Aardvark, a social search service founded by ex-Googlers, is the latest in a series of steps that illustrate the dominance of social media in our online culture today and, more definitively, Google’s commitment to remaining at the convergence of maturing online trends.

While the Aardvark addition pales in comparison with other acquisitions in recent years, such as the $1.6 billion paid for YouTube (now the second-largest search engine, masquerading as a social video-sharing site), it continues to extend Mountain View’s reach into the social web while taking another competitive swipe at perennial runner-up Yahoo! – this time targeting the popular Yahoo! Answers service with which Aardvark competes using a decidedly social media flair. The upstart leverages your own social network connections to provide answers to a user’s questions.

Earlier this week, Google Buzz came thundering onto the social scene offering much the same functionality as Facebook. With Buzz, users can create profiles; embed media from sharing sites such as Picassa, Flicker and YouTube; share information; create groups of friends; post status updates, etc. ¬– all from the comfort of a couple hundred million existing Gmail accounts. While disrupting Facebook’s momentum seems unlikely, the heft of Google’s offering, its reputation for solid technology and its immediate availability to the vast Gmail user base make it a social networking contender worth watching. While I was writing this post, this tweet came across my screen: “Google Buzz makes Facebook look like some college kids’ computer science project.”

One could catch the buzz about Buzz by following the very popular trending topic on Twitter. You could also point your browser to Google and take advantage of Google Social Search. For the last couple months, real-time content from Facebook, MySpace.com and Twitter has been integrated into traditional search results, blending in wall posts, blog entries, tweets and video tags and bringing real-time relevance to users’ queries.

Few dispute that social media is here to stay, that the rise of social networking has truly changed online behavior and that new technologies and evolving trends promise to maintain the dizzying momentum we have seen over recent years. Even fewer should dispute that, however social media matures, Google will be an ever-strengthening force.


May 15, 2009 | Jeff Cohn

Searching for Search Engine Effectiveness

I’ve been playing a game with myself lately. When I search for something on Google, I try to analyze why I am pulled to click on a particular listing in the organic (not paid or sponsored) search return. Clearly page one status helps, but not always. Sometimes I think the real kernel of truth lives on page two or three, hidden from the general public. Those long URLs? Forget it. They make me think they are unrelated to what I’m really searching for. Descriptive headlines in the listing? Very helpful and cause me to click more rapidly. More and more, I think the good brands are very focused on this and look for ways to improve not just their ranking but what it says. It’s still the early days for this area of specialty within marketing. The real brand builders and marketers (not the web tech guys or companies that only do SEO) are the ones who are going to figure this out and make a real difference for their client’s brand.


May 1, 2009 | Steve Chitwood

Synergize Your Search Marketing

With limited budgets, high expectations, and short timelines, marketers are increasingly looking toward online channels to build their brands, acquire and retain customers, reduce costs, and capture any remaining trickle of available revenue the recession hasn’t evaporated. The quest for the best online investment of the precious marketing dollar often leads to search marketing and is met with confusion. What is more effective: optimization (SEO) or paid search (PPC)? The answer is simple: Yes.

There is no doubt that a well-optimized website and a dedicated effort to continually manage and expand the effort yields results. High natural or organic rankings can produce almost magical results; but a #1 organic ranking in Google, the holy grail of search marketing, is nearly as difficult to achieve as the one sought by Indiana Jones in Raiders of the Lost Ark, to say nothing of the effort to keep it.

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