WebProNews

Tag: Bing

  • Matt Cutts Won’t Be At SXSW

    For the search crowd, the SXSW session to take place on Saturday called “Dear Google & Bing: Help Me Rank Better!” is no doubt on the list of those to attend. It was supposed to have Google’s head of web spam Matt Cutts, Bing Sr. Product Manager Duane Forrester (who has kind of become known as Bing’s Matt Cutts) and Search Engine Land Editor in Chief Danny Sullivan, who has established him as one of the leading voices in the search industry.

    View our SXSW coverage here.

    Matt Cutts announced, however, that due to his wife having surgery, he will be unable to attend. He tweeted early this morning:

    My wife has foot surgery tomorrow, so I won’t be able to make it to SXSW in person: http://t.co/CRRAulpC I’ll try to Skype in for the panel. 15 hours ago via Tweet Button ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    He actually wrote about the news on his blog a few days ago, but at that point thought he would still be able to do the panel:

    Every so often real life catches up with you in ways you didn’t expect. My wife broke her foot a few days ago. She took a unfortunate spill off a stepstool, but she’s telling everyone it was a ninja fight. Those ninjas pack a wallop: she’ll wear a cast for up to 6-8 weeks, and the doctor said she can’t drive with her current cast. Overall, the broken foot has been a good reminder that having your bike stolen, while annoying, isn’t too horrible in the grand scheme of things.

    One wrinkle is that my wife and I were going to spend about a week together at South by Southwest, and I was scheduled to participate on a panel. She’s not going now for obvious reasons (ninja fight). I’ve rejiggered my travel so I’m only away from my wife for a day but I believe I can still do the panel.

    That now has an update on it, reflecting what he said in the tweet.

    Fans will no doubt be disappointed. I’ve seen this guy walk the halls at conferences, constantly being surrounded by people who want to talk to him. Just like a rock star. The Twitterverse is understanding, however.

    @mattcutts You are a great husband. Our philosophy is family first. Best of luck to your wife (and you too!) 🙂 15 hours ago via TweetDeck ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    @mattcutts sounds painful. Hope she feels better. Please send her my best. 15 hours ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Here’s the official description for the session:

    If you build it, they might not come, if you haven’t thought about how search engines view your web site. Forget testing for Internet Explorer, Firefox, Chrome and Safari. Search engines are the common browser that everyone uses. The good news is that search engine optimization (SEO) doesn’t mean terrible design or some type of black-magic trickery. Rather, there are good, sensible things that everyone should do that pleases both search engines and human visitors. In this session, representatives from Google and Bing provide this type of advice. They’ll even get you up to speed on the impact that social media is playing on search results. Even better, it’s all Q&A. Bring your top questions about how they rank sites and get answers directly from the source.

    Cutts, Forrester and Sullivan all put together a session together at last year’s SXSW as well. Here’s our coverage of that. It could give you an idea of the kinds of things to expect, though a lot has certainly happened in search in a year’s time. I’m sure Search Plus Your World, for example will be a topic of discussion this year.

    You can find plenty of advice from Matt Cutts on various topics here.

  • Bing Search Quality Insights: New Blog Series Sheds Light On Bing’s Inner-Workings

    Google recently started a series of blog posts highlighting various points of progress it has made in its efforts to increase search quality. The results have essentially been lists of monthly changes Google has made to its algorithm and interface. This has been extremely interesting to watchers of the search industry and webmasters who are concerned with search engine optimization.

    Bing is now starting a similar series, though if the first entry is any indication, we’re going to see a much more in-depth explanation about things in general, as opposed to lists of specific tweaks.

    “Quality improvements in Bing are often subtle but often those little changes are the result of years of research,” says Dr. Harry Shum, Corporate Vice President of Bing R&D. “In the coming weeks and months, you will hear from members of my team on a range of topics, from the complexities of social search and disambiguating spelling errors to whole page relevance and making search more personal. We will also highlight the ideas and projects we have collaborated with colleagues from Microsoft Research and academia to advance the state of the art for our industry. We hope this will not only be useful information for our blog readers, but that they will spark conversations that help us all move the search industry forward.”

    The first entry comes from Jan Pedersen, Chief Scientist for Core Search at Bing, who talks about how Bing determines “whole page relevance,” which it uses to determine not just where to rank a result on the search results page, but whether to just return a link or an “answer”.

    “As with any relevance problem we start with the question of how to measure if Bing has done a good job,” explains Pedersen. “We could do this by simply asking human judges to compare the output of competing blending algorithms and assess which is better. This turns out to be a difficult judgment task that produces quite noisy and unreliable results. Instead we look at how people behave on Bing in the real world. Based on how they respond to changes we make an assumption that a better blending algorithm will move people’s clicks towards the top of the page. This turns out to be the same as saying that a block of content, or answer, is well placed if it receives at least as many clicks as the equivalently sized block of content below it — or, as we say internally, if its win rate is greater than 0.5. So a good blending algorithm will promote an answer on the page upward as long as its win rate is greater than 0.5. Armed with this metric, we can run online experiments and compare the results of competing blending algorithms giving us a realistic data set.”

    Shum did note in a blog post announcing the new blog series that Bing does measure search quality with a mix of offline human judges (presumably similar to Google’s raters) and online user engagement.

    “Next we investigate the available inputs into an online blending function that improves this metric,” continues Pedersen. “We can, and do, use historical anonymous click data, but this is not sufficient because it does not generalize to rare queries, or to new content with no history. So, we add in three kinds of additional inputs: confidence scores from the answer provider, query characterizations, and features extracted from other answers and web pages that will be shown on the page. For example, to learn where to place an image answer in the search results for a given query, we consider the confidence score returned from the image search provider, the ranking scores of nearby Web pages, and whether the query is marked as referring to the sort of entities that are well described by images (people, places, etc.).”

    Bing actually uses over a thousand signals for blending search functions, according to Pedersen. This is in line with what Bing’s Duane Forrester has said in the past – roughly a thousand signals.

    “Finally, we consider the offline and online infrastructure that will be used to create and run a blending function,” adds Pedersen. “We use a very robust, but high-performance learning method, called boosted regression trees, to automatically produce a ranking function given training data. This allows us to use many signals with the confidence that each additional signal will incrementally improve our blending function. Our training sets are fairly large, since they are mined from our billions of anonymous query session logs, so we use our large-scale data mining infrastructure, called Cosmos, to prepare the data and run offline experiments. Once a new blending function has been generated by our offline learning method, it is deployed to a serving component internally called APlus that puts all that data into action and runs after all candidate content blocks that have been generated, where it can be tested via online experimentation and finally placed into production.”

    Pedersen says Bing has been focusing on applying all of this to new inputs for “temporarily relevant” answers. Think news stories that die down after a while.

    If you’re really into learning about the inner-workings of search engines, it’s a pretty interesting read, and is frankly not he kind of thing we see from Bing very often. It looks like that’s changing now.

    There’s not much here in terms of SEO guidance, at least in the first post, but SEO enthusiasts will no doubt want to keep an eye on the series and stay on the lookout for info and tips that could be applied to SEO strategies. Google’s change lists are a bit more useful in this regard.

  • Facebook Promotes Bing Search Even More

    As I (and others) have suggested in numerous articles in the past, the competitive landscape around search and social media could get really interesting if Facebook decided to start getting more involved with search. Facebook and Google are competitors. Microsoft and Google are competitors. Facebook and Microsoft (Bing, in particular) are partners. Bing integrates Facebook into its search engine. Facebook uses Bing for web search results.

    Now, Facebook is reportedly showing users what looks like a big Bing homepage when they log out.

    Bing Home Page

    It’s a new ad the company is trying. Only some users are seeing it. I’m not seeing an ad in this spot at all right now, but Josh Constine at TechCrunch has a screenshot. It essentially just looks like the Bing homepage, like above, and lets users search Bing as they’re leaving Facebook (apparently opening the search in a new browser tab).

    While it may just be an ad, and not really any new search offering from Facebook, it’s still a very prominent placement for Bing as millions of Facebook users log out on a regular basis. One can only imagine that a web search is often their next web activity.

    I still expect that we’ll see Facebook place more emphasis on search in the future. Remember when Twitter had that “aha” moment and added search to its home page? Now, it’s a go-to resource for real-time info in an areas where Google is failing. Facebook is way bigger, and is in great need of better search functionality. It may just take a partner like Bing to help with that.

  • Bing Tests New Results Pages

    Bing Tests New Results Pages

    Bing is testing some new looks for its search results pages.

    Liveside’s Michael Gillett, crediting @ParasValecha for the tip, says they’ve been testing several different designs over the past few months, but that more people are now seeing one like this:

    Bing Redesign

    Image Credit: Michael Gillett

    It’s worth noting that there is a greater ID presence, with the photo appearing in the corner, which apparently draws from your Facebook profile when you’re signed in (though you can also sign in with Windows Live ID).

    Also, the related searches appear on the opposite side of the screen as they do with the current version of Bing.

    In other Bing news, Microsoft just launched some new features for Bing Webmaster Tools today at SMX West.

  • Bing Webmaster Tools Gets Organic Keyword Research Tool, API

    At SMX West today, Microsoft’s Bing revealed some updates to Bing Webmaster Tools. There’s a new organic keyword research tool and an API.

    On the keyword research tool, Bing’s Duane Forrester explains, “This tool allows you to perform keyword research on any phrase you enter. It resides within your WMT account and offers the ability to see query volume data on the phrase you enter, and related phrases, across many different countries and languages. You can easily explore query volumes on keywords by simply clicking on any related keyword. All data within the tool is exportable, and we hold a history of up to 6 months for all phrases. This means you can select a date range covering up to the previous six months to see query volume data for the time period you select. Query data shown in the results within this tool are based on organic query data from Bing and is raw data, not rounded in any way. This tool is found when you login, on the Keyword tab.”

    Bing Keyword Research

    “Upon login, you see a simple interface with a few options to help you target country and language. You can also select “strict” to ensure results are restricted to the exact phrase to word you entered,” he continues. “Entering a phrase or keyword and clicking the Search button will bring back organic keyword query data for the phrase entered, as well as for related phrases. Here we have selected one filter for the United States, but left the language open, and strict unchecked to see what the keyword ecosystem looks like around our topic, in the US. Not surprisingly, our example of fly fishing, during these winter months, nets us lower query volumes. The graph clearly shows a run-up on query volume coming into the holiday season, and trending lower afterwards. ”

    The API, of course, lets you access the data in other places. The documentation for that is here.

    Forrester goes more in depth into the new changes in this blog post.

    The features are currently available to all people with webmaster tools accounts.

  • Bing, Nokia Unify Map Designs, Make Aesthetically Pleasing World

    Bing and Nokia conjunctively announced today that they’re unifying their respective map designs in order to provide a clearer, more visually appealing map for their users. The lovechild of the cartographic coupling will amplify the details of the mapping service so users will more easily – at least this is the hope – find where they’re going even easier than before.

    One of the most salient qualities evident in the map upgrade is how less cluttered the maps appear to be without reducing the amount of knowledge available to a user. The examples below were provided from Nokia’s announcement and, while they’re small, even at that scale you can immediately see that the image is a lot clearer and less overwhelming. The side streets aren’t so prominent and lumped together with the main roads that you’re more likely to need. The colors designating water or grassy areas seem more pastel, too, so you’re in luck if you prefer softer hues. The color enhancements will hopefully help users avoid mistaking roads for rivers (i.e., driving into rivers).


    According to the Bing side of things, users will notice an improvement to the topographical details to a map. Bing hopes that the added detail of the actual landscape will help people “consume mapping details more quickly.” When you’re ready for second helpings of Bing Maps, another improvement that may serve to reanimate your appetite is the way the text is now flush with whatever level of zoom you’re using.

    Bing also notes a change to the visual hierarchy on the maps. Different amounts of information will be observed depending on what degree you are zoomed in so users won’t be met with a barrage of detailed information before they need it. “Go in for detail, pull back for context,” Bing easily explains.

    While the changes are going to be noticeable to people regardless of what map they’re using, Bing cites some big improvements to countries like Egypt, Israel, Malta, Philippines, Uruguay and Venezuela.

    The upgrade will be rolled out gradually on Nokia web maps, first on maps.nokia.com, then later to the Bing, however, didn’t clarify if it will be gradually rolling out the changes but as far as I can tell the changes appear to be live for the website and the mobile site.s I can tell the changes appear to be live for the website and the mobile site.

  • Win A Year of Free Redbox Rentals With Bing’s Oscar-Night Twitter Contest

    Win A Year of Free Redbox Rentals With Bing’s Oscar-Night Twitter Contest

    Do you have a gripe about the current state of filmmaking? Do you long for the golden age where (most) ideas were original and the world had never even heard of Michael Bay? If so, you can voice your critiques of modern cinema while possibly winning free Redbox rentals for a year.

    Sunday night is Oscar night, and it’s also the kickoff of Bing’s “Movies Were Best When” sweepstakes. Bing wants you to tweet you best responses on February 26th for the chance to win the free Redbox rentals. all you have to do is tweet your response @ the Bing Twitter account and use the hashtag #MoviesWereBestWhen.

    Bing will then choose 25 winners from all the tweets they receive on that day.

    Some of the details:

    During the Entry Period, a question will be posted, prompting you to reply with your answer, @-mention Bing within the post, and the hashtag #MoviesWereBestWhen. You have until the end of the Entry Period to submit a response to the Sweepstakes question.

    Your Tweet must include an answer to our question, the “hashtag” #MoviesWereBestWhen, and tag @Bing.

    By posting a tweet that answers the question posed by @Bing, you will automatically receive one (1) entry to the Sweepstakes. You can post only one answer and are limited to one (1) entry per person/twitter ID during the Entry Period. You must remain a follower until March 26, 2012 to be contacted if you win.

    So, you have to follow Bing and stay a follower of Bin on Twitter to claim your prize. The prize will be given out as 7,800 Bing Rewards Credits. If you aren’t familiar with Bing Rewards Credits, it’s an initiative launched back in 2010 that allows Bing users to earn points by using Bing services. These points can then be redeemed for prizes like gift cards and such.

    In December, they expanded the reward offerings to include Redbox, and Xbox Live Points.

    According to Bing, a year’s worth of rentals equals 52 movies – or one a week. Some of us might blow through more than 1 movie a week, but hey, 52 free movies for a single tweet isn’t a bad deal.

  • Yahoo and Bing: Look How Well Our Ads Are Doing

    As you may know, Microsoft and Yahoo have a “search alliance” which sees Microsoft powering Yahoo’s organic search results, as well as migrating Yahoo Search Marketing to Microsoft’s adCenter.

    The organic transition has already happened worldwide, and the ad platform transition is still in the process. In fact, the companies just announced that it’s rolling out in the UK, Ireland and France.

    In a post on Yahoo’s Advertising Solutions blog, Yahoo is pointing to four recent studies from Efficient Frontier, Marin Software, Rimm-Kaufman Group (RKG) and Ignition One, and pulling out some points made in these about the momentum of the search alliance’s paid side:

    According to Microsoft, the transition should be complete in the previously mentioned European countries by the end of April.

  • Bing Linked Pages: Bing’s Answer To Google’s Profiles?

    Bing has launched “Linked Pages,” which allow people to link sites related to themselves in search results for when people search for the person’s name.

    Pretty interesting, especially since Bing allows users to simply add links that they just like.

    “Search for yourself,” suggests Ian Lin of Bing Social Search. “Try including your city, school, or employer – for example ‘John Smith Bing’ – to find more results and start linking. Links can include your blog, a personal website, organizations you’re associated with, activities you’re involved with or just sites you like. And as your interests and activities change, you can easily link more. So now when your friends search for you, they’ll not only see trusted results from Bing, but also the pages and sites you’ve linked.”

    You can add your links at bing.com/linkedpages. You log in with your Facebook ID, by the way.

    “Help your friends show up better on Bing too,” says Lin. “Just search for a friend and link pages about them.”

    “You have full control over what results you’re linked in,” Lin adds. “Simply follow the link notification from Facebook or go to bing.com/linkedpages to remove links you added or links your friends added about you. Once you remove a link, you are the only person that can go back and relink yourself to that page. And as a reminder, you have to give permission to Bing to start linking pages and can turn it off at any time by disabling the application in Facebook.”

    “As the most popular social network, Facebook has given all of us an easy way to re-connect with old friends or schoolmates,” Lin adds. “Chances are they’re using search to check us out to see what else we’ve been up to. With Linked Pages on Bing, you can decide how you look to your old roommate, your first crush, or a new friend.”

    <a href='http://video.msn.com/?vid=649129a0-2e8a-40c8-87cc-4c3b003a7dbf&#038;mkt=en-us&#038;src=SLPl:embed::uuids' target='_new' title='Make a Good Search Impression with Bing’s Linked Pages'>Video: Make a Good Search Impression with Bing’s Linked Pages</a>

    The Linked Pages are US-only at first.

    The whole thing is a pretty interesting strategy for people search. It gives people more of a say in what information comes up for them in web searches. Really, it appears to be Bing’s answer to the Google Profile, which of course is the center of a user’s Google+ presence. And as you know, Google+ is being much more integrated into Google search results these days.

    At BlogWorld back in November, I sat in on a session led by Bing’s Duane Forrester, in which he explained that search engines have trouble connecting your various web IDs together to you as a person. I suggested that Google does this via the Google profile, which enables users to put the links they want associated with themselves on there, and connect them to their Google presence. I asked Forrester why Bing doesn’t have something like this, given that who you are is becoming such an important signal on the web, and many people have various accounts with different non-identifiable user names all over the web. Here’s a snippet from my previous article on this subject:

    His response in a nutshell was that this isn’t one of the things users say they want. Bing asks what features users would like to see implemented, and they try to implement them as such, when feasible.

    Another difference between Microsoft (which owns Bing obviously) and Google are the philosophies around their products. He referenced recent comments by Eric Schmidt, saying that Google is all one product. Microsoft, on the other hand is comprised of all kinds of different products, and that’s the way they view it. Google’s view (at least by my understanding) is that its various products are more like features of one greater product (which is actually how I’ve tended to look at it myself, which is why I consider Google+ to really be a lot bigger than people typically tend to view it as).

    Forrester talked about how they could use things like Windows Live ID, but then there are potential legal issues that could come about when trying to use that stuff.

    By the way, Google’s privacy policy consolidation kind of plays into the mentality described above.

    But it looks like Bing is kind of making up for the lack of a “profile” with this new offering. The fact that it has deals with Facebook and Twitter certainly help on the personalized connections front – the element Google is bringing to the table with Google+ and “Search Plus Your World”.

    If Bing can keep increasing its market share, this whole approach will only gain relevancy to web users.

    Bing’s Linked Pages are in beta. It appears that some have already been taking advantage, but you may not be able to do your own link associating just yet. Bing says to “check back soon”.

    Do you think this is a good strategy for Bing? Let us know in the comments.

  • YouTube Hires Bing General Manager To Be New VP Of Marketing

    Google has hit Bing where it hurts by hiring away its general manager of marketing.

    AdAge is reporting that Google has hired Danielle Tiedt, former general manager of marketing for Bing. She led the recent “Bing is for Doing” ad campaign and was around when the search engine first launched. What will she be doing under Google? She’s going to become the VP of marketing for YouTube.

    What will Tiedt be doing for YouTube? Google says that she “play a pivotal role as we move forward into our next phase of growth.”

    Bing has definitely grown into its own and is now the second most popular search engine on the Web. If Tiedt can bring that kind of growth to the YouTube brand, we can expect some big things from what is already the biggest video service on the Web.

    As YouTube becomes more of a content delivery service instead of just a place where I can upload videos of myself complaining about the world; the video site is going to need some heavy marketing to convince more people that they can rival television and other professional video content.

    YouTube is already heavily invested in creating new content and channels with the recent announcement of a sports channel. With this new hire, expect YouTube to grow more into a service that can challenge the big boys.

  • Video Markup Hits Schema.org (Google, Bing, Yahoo)

    Last year, Google, Bing and Yahoo teamed up to announced schema.org, an initiative to supporta a common set of schemas for structured data markup on web pages.

    Schema.org got some rich snippet markup for music a couple months later, which servies like MySpace, Rhapsody and ReverbNation immediately started implementing.

    Google announced today that the trio of companies have no launched a new video markup. Google product manager Henry Zhang writes on the Webmaster Central Blog, “Adding schema.org video markup is just like adding any other schema.org data. Simply define an itemscope, an itemtype=”http://schema.org/VideoObject”, and make sure to set the name, description, and thumbnailURL properties. You’ll also need either the embedURL — the location of the video player — or the contentURL — the location of the video file.”

    In the post, he shares an example of what a typical video player with markup might look like.

    “Using schema.org markup will not affect any Video Sitemaps or mRSS feeds you’re already using,” says Zhang. “In fact, we still recommend that you also use a Video Sitemap because it alerts us of any new or updated videos faster and provides advanced functionality such as country and platform restrictions.”

    “Since this means that there are now a number of ways to tell Google about your videos, choosing the right format can seem difficult,” he adds. “In order to make the video indexing process as easy as possible, we’ve put together a series of videos and articles about video indexing in our new Webmasters EDU microsite.”

    The relevant section on the Schema.org site is here.

  • Presidents Day Gets Cool Theme From Bing

    Presidents Day Gets Cool Theme From Bing

    Today the United States is celebrating Presidents Day, the holiday that celebrates our first president, George Washington, or George Washington & Abraham Lincoln, or all the leaders of our country – depending on who you ask. Presidents Day (or Presidents’ Day) is the common term for the actual federal holiday celebrating Washington’s Birthday on the third Monday in February. Washington’s real birthdate is February 22nd.

    In celebration of the day, Bing’s homepage features a wonderful tribute. If you visit Bing today, you’ll see the Washington Monument, surrounded by waving American flags with the U.S. Capitol sitting off in the background. Here’s how it looks, animated:

    The search box features some clickable boxes that lead to Bing searches for related Presidents Day topics. The first takes us to a generic search for “Presidents Day,” while the others prompt searches for more specific things like the Washington Monument, last year’s earthquake that damaged the Monument, and photos of the Lincoln Memorial (I mean, it’s sort of his holiday too).

    Bing also links to this guy’s YouTube video on wacky Presidential facts:

    Bing’s Presidents Day theme is really cool in my opinion, and it’s better than Google’s Doodle for the holiday. That’s because Google doesn’t have a Doodle for Presidents Day today (and haven’t really in the past either).

    It’s not like Google’s slighting our first Prez for some weird reason – I mean, there are a lot of things that happen each and every day. Google can’t make a Google Doodle for everything. But they did have one for the 125th anniversary of the largest snowflake ever recorded…so…

  • msnNow From Microsoft Highlights Bing, Facebook, Twitter Trends

    Microsoft just launched a new MSN service called msnNOW, which the company says is designed to surface breaking trends from across the web, show what people are saying about the trends and why they matter.

    “msnNOW scours real-time sources, including Facebook, Twitter, Bing, and BreakingNews.com, so you can stay up on what everyone is talking about and join the conversation,” a Microsoft spokesperson tells WebProNews.

    “Whether you’re looking for the latest election trends or celebrity gossip, you can easily sort through topics that you care most about, including entertainment, sports, lifestyle, news of the day and finance,” the spokesperson says. “And, the ‘Biggest Movers’ feature lets you keep track of the day’s most buzzed about and discussed topics from millions of analyzed tweets, comments, and searches, letting you see what’s on the way up and what’s about to be old news.”

    “You can access msnNOW whenever and wherever, including on your PC, mobile device, tablet, Facebook or Twitter,” the spokesperson adds. “For more information, go to the MSN blog post and MSN Virtual Press Kit for the video, screenshots, and to learn more about the people behind msnNOW. The embed code for the video is included below.”

    <a href='http://www.bing.com/videos/browse?mkt=en-us&#038;vid=24b787a7-8dfe-46f6-bfc2-80da29a71a67&#038;from=sharepermalink&#038;src=v5:embed::' target='_new' title='msnNOW Arrives Today: Know About It'>Video: msnNOW Arrives Today: Know About It</a>

    I don’t know how many trend services we really need, but this one is does have a leg up on some other ones given that it is a combination of search trends as well as trends from Facebook and Twitter.

    The launch follows the recent launch of a new MSN iPad app.

  • Bing: Here’s How To Become An Authority

    It looks like Bing’s counterpart to Google’s Matt Cutts, Duane Forrester, is now putting out Matt Cutts-style webmaster videos for Bing Webmaster Tools.

    He posted this one about becoming an authority by building quality content and sharing properly:

    <a href='http://video.msn.com/?vid=4f90e5ae-fa68-433a-b8a1-534f98bd888d&#038;mkt=en-us&#038;src=SLPl:embed::uuids' target='_new' title='Bing Webmaster Tools: Duane Forrester on Establishing Authority in Bing'>Video: Bing Webmaster Tools: Duane Forrester on Establishing Authority in Bing</a>

    “You being an authority means you’re an expert. You rank better,” says Forrester. “You get more traffic.That just leads to better business success for you, which is what you want.”

    “The first thing is, you need to focus on fundamentals here,” he says. “What we’re really talking about is the quality you have – the quality of content you build and the quality of sharing you do socially. Those are really two critically important points.”

    He gives an example of “how to build quality content” using eBay.

    “Let me give you two scenarios,” he continues. “One: you’re going to sell a cordless drill on eBay, and you’re just going to take the standard information, images and such. Now, the second example, we’re going to sell the same product – the same cordless drill – but we’re actually going to take videos of that cordless drill in use. We’re going to show that cordless drill in its packaging, in its wrapper, in every way possible. We are going to amplify it. Lots of extra pictures. We’re going to do this all on our own. We’re going to write up descriptions. We’re going to put all of that together.”

    “It’s pretty clear to see here by these descriptions that we’re going to have a standard view of an item for sale, and a really deep, rich, immersive view of an item for sale,” says Forrester.

    The second version, he says, is the “quality”.

    “That is what people are looking for to answer their questions,” he continues. “So when that comes to you content, you have to think of it in terms of, ‘Have I answered all of the questions this searcher has? Have I done it to a depth that satisfies them?’ If you can do that, you need to move on to the next step, which is sharing properly.”

    “You get out there, and you’re sharing things on Facebook, or you’re putting it on Twitter. Any of the social media spaces that you like and you frequent, you’re putting this stuff out there.”

    He says that before you submit this stuff, you have to ask yourself: Will my tweet or my post bring quality to my followers or my friends?

    “That is a critical step,” he emphasizes. “They want you to bring them quality. They need you to bring them quality. You need to bring them quality. If you don’t bring them quality, they’re going to stop following you. If you bring them good quality links either to your content or to related content, they will continually engage with you. They will share you. They will like you. They will amplify that for you. That amplification – that signals that you’re becoming an authority socially.”

    “Pull all of that together,” he says. “Now you’re starting to see things as the search engine sees it.

    More on Forrester’s thoughts about search and social from a presentation he gave at BlogWorld in November can be found here.

  • Bing Retains #2 Rank Among Search Engines In January

    comScore’s ranking of search engines for the month of January were released today and Microsoft’s Bing has held onto the title of second most-used search engine for the second month in a row.

    In December, Microsoft’s Bing unseated Yahoo! to become the #2 rank among search engines and in January Bing cemented that second rank a little further. The percentage of shares among all search engines remained largely unchanged in January from December, which if you’re Microsoft is probably good news. Consistency like that demonstrates that Bing’s bump to the second most-used search engine in December wasn’t just a fluke. Also, any argument about how the holidays inflated Microsoft’s market share in December’s would appear to be largely unfounded.

    Given Yahoo’s recent top-level shake-ups, it’ll be curious to see if the percentage shares of the search market change much for the company in February.

    Lastly, yes, Google remained Boss Hogg of the trough search engines.

  • Rick Santorum Sees Surge in Searches, Stays Frothy In Various Search Engines

    If you follow U.S. politics at all (or at this point, even turn on a TV), you probably know that Rick Santorum had a good Tuesday night. The former Pennsylvania Senator swept the primary contests, winning Colorado with 40.2% of the vote, Minnesota with 44.8%, and Missouri with 55.2%.

    Santorum focused a lot of time and energy in these three states leading up to Tuesday night, and it appears to have paid off. Meanwhile, front-runner Mitt Romney’s camp continues to say that they didn’t really focus much attention in those contests and Santorum’s victories shouldn’t be given too much thought.

    For what seems like the 100th time, Rick Santorum is somehow rising back into the national conversation. And we all know that with renewed interest comes curiosity. And with curiosity comes internet searches.

    And the searches have come, according to Google’s new Politics & Elections dashboard. According to a Google+ post, Rick Santorum saw a surge in search traffic in Colorado, Minnesota, and Missouri in the last day leading up to voting. When you factor in the entire prior week, his search traffic increased by 262% in Colorado, 386% in Missouri, and a staggering 515% in Minnesota.

    This bested the search growth of the other GOP candidates by more than double.

    On one hand, the Santorum camp can say “awesome, people are searching for me. I’m relevant!” And on the other hand, there has to be a part of Rick Santorum that kind of cringes every time he hears that his search traffic has spiked.

    That’s because Rick Santorum has a Google problem – one that we’ve covered extensively.

    A quick rundown of the issue: A few years ago, popular gay blogger Dan Savage created a site called “Spreading Santorum.” The site defines the word “Santorum” as “the frothy mix of lube and fecal matter than is sometimes the byproduct of anal sex.” Why did he do this? Because Santorum (a staunch social conservative) had said some pretty offensive things about homosexuality, comparing it to bestiality among other things. Although Santorum maintains that his words were taken out of context – it doesn’t really matter. The site achieved prime real estate on Google searches for “Santorum.”

    It wasn’t exactly a Google bomb in the classical sense, but SEO tactics raised its visibility and now it is in the first results you see when you search “Santorum” on Google (third when you search “Rick Santorum”).

    So think about it. Every time a voter searches for Rick Santorum on Google, it’s highly likely that they see this lewd definition. And let’s be honest – a large percentage of voters searching for Santorum might not understand how or why that result is so prominently displayed.

    And as I told you back at the beginning of the year, Santorum’s “Google Problem” is not really limited to Google. In fact, Santorum has a Bing and Yahoo problem as well.

    Santorum contacted Google a while back about his problem, to which they basically said sorry, we don’t remove content from search results except in very limited circumstances. and the fact is, Spreading Santorum isn’t at the top of search result through some sort of secret agenda. It’s there because it’s one of the most relevant results out there for Rick Santorum.

    It’s impossible that voters searching for Santorum fail to see this result. But he just won based on the support of conservative voters in three states. Is it possible that the “problem” isn’t that much of a problem for Santorum? I still feel that in time, however, his raunchy result will end up negatively impacting his campaign.

  • Bing Webmaster Tools Gets Markup Validator

    Bing Webmaster Tools has a new tool called the Markup Validation Tool, which can be found under the “crawl” tab

    “This tool is a great way to understand if the added code is actually going to be readable, as intended,” says Bing’s Duane Forrester. “While the markup code being inaccurate will not cause your page to render any differently in most cases, having the syntax incorrect can affect our ability to use the data as you intend. Now you can easily check URLs for valid markup code from inside your webmaster tools account.”

    The tool scans: HTML Microdata, Microformats, RDFa, Schema.org, and Open Graph markups, and displays them when properly implemented. When the user enters a URL, it will scan it and show the data it finds.

    If a page is scanned, and doesn’t have any markup installed, or if it’s not installed right, the user will get an error message.

    “If you are experiencing errors when using the tool to check your markup installation, please reference the links provided above to ensure you are using the code as intended within the parameters specified for each language,” says Forrester.

    In other Bing news, it sounds like they’re preparing to do something more useful with all of that Facebook and Twitter data they have access to.

  • Bing Hints At Better Utilization of Facebook, Twitter In Near Future

    It’s well known within the Internet industry that Bing has special access to Facebook and Twitter that Google doesn’t. They pay for such access. Google thinks it can do better by putting Google+ content all over its results with Search Plus Your World. Not everyone is a fan of this.

    Liz Gannes at All Things D ran an interview with Bing Director Stefan Weitz today, and pressed him about why Bing isn’t taking more advantage of the uproar around Google’s SPYW, given that it has the Twitter and Facebook access that Google doesn’t. They talk about more than that, but here are the relevant things that Weitz said to that part of the converstaion:

    We are doing some ads this week [There was also a Bing-is-great blog post today]. They [Google] are doing a nice job on their own of handling this problem.

    But they are learning just like we are. They did what we didn’t want to do, which was make the user experience peppered with this stuff, with +1s everywhere, the Google+ content in the top corner. I think [Google] realized we were ahead and they overextended. But I know a ton of guys there and they’re smart and they’re reacting what has been said.

    You’re going to see the culmination of a lot of our learnings in the not too distant future. All those lessons will be applied into something that I think is pretty interesting. How we think about social is always evolving, and the next turn of the crank is more differentiated than we’ve seen in the past.

    At least now we know what that Bing’s Favorite Bing features post was about. I have to admit, I’m curious about this “something interesting”.

  • Bing Lists Bing’s Favorite Bing Features

    Bing Lists Bing’s Favorite Bing Features

    A couple of weeks ago, we noticed that when we visited Bing.com, Bing wanted to give us a tour of what Bing’s homepage. It was very helpful of Bing to show us that they have old Bing homepage images available for viewing, mouseover facts about Bing homepage images, and trending topics that are quite visible at the bottom of the page.

    Today, in a blog post, Bing is sharing Bing’s favorite Bing features.

    “This week we have been encouraging people to take another look at Bing,” says the Bing Team. “To help folks who may not have used us in a while find some of our favorite features, we’ve pulled together a quick list of some cool things you can do on Bing that you won’t find other places.”

    This should be helpful for all of those non-Bing enthusiasts who follow Bing’s blog. Bing’s “favorite features” are:

    • Bing’s homepage
    • Bing Travel’s price predictor
    • Bing Video’s “smart motion preview”
    • Bing Music’s artist pages
    • Bing Events’ “FanSnap”
    • Bing Local’s Action Buttons
    • Bing Maps’ Mall Maps
    • Bing Shopping’s Deals
    • Bing Maps’ Airport Maps
    • Bing’s presence on Xbox, mobile and iPad.

    Bing’s share of the search market has managed to see continued growth in the U.S. Last month, comScore reported that its share was at 15.1% in December (compared to Google’s 66%). Yahoo’s share was down to 14.5%.

    Do you have a favorite Bing feature? What is it?

  • Super Bowl XLVI As Told By Lucas Oil Stadium

    So you say you’re going to Indy for the Super Bowl? As you already know, Indianapolis is the capitol of Indiana and the big game is proudly being held at Indy’s Lucas Oil Stadium. Lucas Oil opened August 16, 2008 and the stadium owns the largest retractable roof in the NFL. The stadium itself covers 1.8 million square feet and in 2009 was named Sports Facility of The Year. In the picture below you can see Lucas Oil from a bird’s eye view.

    In the images below you can see the development of Lucas Oil from early beginning construction to the nearly done stage. To build the stadium it cost 720 million dollars and surprisingly took little time to build.


    Lucas Oil seats over 67,00 fans while boasting a spectacular view of downtown Indianapolis. The stadium, while being a multi-purpose facility, is home to the Colts football team. The surface of the field is made of FieldTurf, which was ranked best field surface in both 2009 and ’10.

    It was stated earlier that the stadium is a multi-purpose venue and it truly is. It not only hold NFL and NBA games, but concerts, national conventions, trade shows, IHSAA (Indiana High School Athletic Association) finals, band competitions and countless other events as well. The stadium consists of seven levels and contains more backstage space than any other stadium in the NFL. It contains 7 locker rooms, 11 indoor truck docks, 44,000 square feet of exhibit space and 12 large meeting rooms. If the weather is nice enough the large north facing window can be opened for a breathtaking view of downtown Indy.

    So you’re sitting in the nosebleeds and can’t get a good view of the players, well don’t let that stop you. Lucas Oil sports 2 HD video boards more than large enough to see all your favorite players. A cool addition, the 360 degree ribbon board can be seen lighting up all game long advertising and sending the audience messages to “get loud” and “please be quiet, offense at work”. Receiving nearly, if not over, 1 million visitors per year, Lucas Oil is the perfect venue for any event and in this case even Super Bowl XLVI

    Lucas Oil stadium replaced the RCA dome in 2008 after the stadium was finished. The stadium was designed by HKS of Dallas, Texas and, as mentioned earlier, cost 720 million dollars to build. Much financing came from the state of Indiana and the city of Indianapolis with an addition of 100 million dollars made by the Colts. The stadium is operated by the Capital Improvements Board pf Managers of Marion County. Since inception of the stadium, it was projected that Lucas Oil”s generated revenue upon completion and opening, would hit or exceed 2.25 billion dollars over the course of ten years and, in addition, create 4,200 new jobs for residents.

    Some fun facts about construction

    It took 130,00 cubic yards of cast-in-place concrete to build.

    16,00 tons of steel was used in construction.

    700 pieces of structural precast concrete were used.

    1,440 pieces of architectural precast concrete were used

    9,100 pieces of exterior glass were used as well.

  • Search Engines Given Code Of Practice

    Search Engines Given Code Of Practice

    It looks like the copyright police are at it again. This time they are in a secret meeting with search engine companies making demand of them.

    In a document obtained by TorrentFreak, it has come to light that copyright holders held a meeting with search engines like Google, Bing and Yahoo to make demands in regards to copyright. The meeting was held by the UK Department for Media, Culture and Sport.

    The document begins with a lengthy diatribe on why search engines are hurting legitimate business in the UK by linking to illegal sites first instead of their Web sites:

    Consumers rely on search engines to find and access entertainment content and they play a vital role in the UK digital economy. At present, consumers searching for digital copies of copyright entertainment content are directed overwhelmingly to illegal sites and services. This causes consumer confusion and significantly impedes the development of licensed digital entertainment markets in the UK. Search engines, as trusted intermediaries, should assist consumers in finding legal services and should not contribute to copyright infringement.

    This paper proposes the introduction of a voluntary Code of Practice for search engines, overseen by Government, which would help to ensure that consumers are directed to safe and legal sources for entertainment content online and grow the UK digital economy.

    The paper then goes on to list its propositions:

    – assign lower rankings to sites that repeatedly make available unlicensed content in breach of copyright

    -prioritise Web sites that obtain certification as a licensed site under recognized scheme

    -stop indexing Web sites that are subject to court orders while establishing suitable procedures to de-index substantially infringing sites

    – continue to improve the operation of the “notice and takedown” system and ensure that
    search engines do not encourage consumers toward illegal sites via suggested
    searches

    -ensure that they do not support illegal sites by advertising them or placing advertising
    on them, or profit from infringement by selling key words associated with piracy or
    selling mobile applications which facilitate infringement.

    The paper goes on to detail the voluntary “Code of Practice” for search engines that would actively direct consumers to “legal entertainment content,” encourage Web sites towards improved online behavior, ensure that consumers reduce their exposure to malware or scams, ensure the existing system of removing illegal content from search results works to optimum effect, and help ensure that search engines unwittingly profit from illegal content.

    The paper quotes a survey that says consumers are overwhelmingly in support of search engines directing them to legal sources of entertainment. The paper says that consumers favor legal sites over illegal sites because they don’t want to break the law unwittingly by downloading from illegal sources.

    The paper then details individual actions for each of the propositions listed above. There’s a lot there and it’s a good read. The paper is listed as “private and confidential” but it’s too important not to see. There’s some good stuff here on how businesses interact with search engines. I suggest you take some time out of your day to read it.

    Proposals to Search Engines