WebProNews

Tag: Search

  • Google Drops the Google+ From Business Reviews

    Google Drops the Google+ From Business Reviews

    Google is reportedly no longer requiring users to have Google+ accounts to leave reviews. Given that Google+’s popularity never really caught on, this could open up the door for local businesses to get a lot more reviews on Google for better or for worse.

    Google has of course been removing the Google+ integration it spent several years building into many of its products, and this is just the latest example. For the most part, users have not seemed to be incredibly thrilled with Google+ being thrust upon their various Google experiences. The YouTube comment integration was particularly unpopular, but Google got rid of that last summer.

    According to reports, all users need to leave reviews on businesses is a Google account. They’re still required to leave a first and last name.

    More Google users leaving more reviews? I can’t imagine that Yelp, a frequent critic of Google, is thrilled with this news.

    Local search guy Mike Blumenthal who reported on the change (via Search Engine Land) also notes that Google has fixed a bug that prevented reviews from being left on mobile browsers if the business had no previous reviews. This is another reason businesses might start seeing their review counts go up.

    In related news, late last week, Google updated its documentation that contains advice for improving your local ranking. More on that here.

  • Pinterest Launches New Rich Pin Type ‘How-To Pins’

    Pinterest announced the launch of a new type of Rich Pin called How-To Pins. These include step-by-step instructions to help users accomplish whatever the pins pertain to.

    As a Pinterest spokesperson tells us, “When you tap a Pin for a closer look, you’ll see all the info you need to try an idea on Pins in food & drink, hair & beauty, fitness and DIY.”

    At first, users will start seeing How-To Pins from Home Depot, Food.com, Style Me Pretty, Greatist, ELLE, Marie Claire, Brit & Co., Sunset, Delish and others, in the home feed (only from brands they follow), in search or by visiting a brand’s profile.

    “We’re building a catalog of +50 billion ideas, and this is the latest update to Pins as we add more rich data to make them as useful and actionable as possible,” the spokesperson says, adding, “Pinterest is increasingly the app for finding ideas. According to an IPSOS Survey of online adults 18-64, an overwhelming majority said Pinterest was the best app to find inspiration, plan, and try something new, while Facebook is about making connections and Twitter is about staying updated on current events.”

    How-To Pins are rolling out today to all Pinterest users in the US, UK, and Germany on Android and the web. iOS will gain support in the future.

    Images via Pinterest

  • Top Google Ranking Signals Officially Named

    Top Google Ranking Signals Officially Named

    A Googler revealed the 3 top Google ranking signals in a hangout.

    Webmasters and SEOs have been wondering what the top Google ranking signals are for many years. The entire secret sauce changes pretty much every day, of course, but Google would never reveal all of its more than 200 ranking signals beyond saying, well, it has over 200 of them.

    It was somewhat surprising then that last year, the company dropped the nugget in a seemingly random interview that it had a new signal, going so far as to say that it’s actually the third most important one already.

    That would be RankBrain, but many have probably wondered what the two above that in the pecking order are. It just so happens that Google revealed the other two of the top three this week.

    And the Top Google Ranking Signals are…

    The truth is it’s hardly a bombshell, and the top two are probably the ones most people would guess if they were asked, but it’s nice to see Google definitively spell them out. The 3 top Google ranking signals are content, links, and RankBrain.

    Barry Schwartz pulled this out of a WebPromo Expert chat in which Google Search Quality Senior Strategist Andrey Lipattsev spilled the beans: “I can tell you what they are. It is content and links pointing to your site.”

    Asked about if he means in that order, he responded that there is no order.

    The most important focuses for a successful search strategy…

    So the most important things you can do for search ranking are create great content, and have people naturally link to it. RankBrain doesn’t really afford you any power that we know of as it’s simply a machine learning signal that helps Google internally, including (reportedly) how to weight some other signals.

    For more on the impact of RankBrain, take a look at our coverage of a recent study from Stone Temple Consulting on the subject.

    Ultimately, there’s probably nothing here to change your approach. You knew this stuff was important. Just know going forward that it’s the MOST important.

    Image via YouTube

  • RankBrain Tweaks Weights of Google Ranking Signals On Its Own?

    RankBrain Tweaks Weights of Google Ranking Signals On Its Own?

    Google revealed RankBrain to be its third most important ranking factor last year, but there appears to be a good deal of confusion within the company about just how it works.

    What are your thoughts about RankBrain? Do you see it as a good thing for Google? Share your thoughts.

    RankBrain was revealed in October pretty much out of nowhere. It didn’t come in an official announcement, but from an interview Bloomberg Business ran with Greg Corrado, a senior research scientist at Google. He said that Google had introduced the algorithm on a wide scale earlier in the year and that it quickly became the third most important signal out of hundreds in Google’s ranking algorithm.

    RankBrain uses artificial intelligence to put written language into mathematical entities (vectors) that computers can understand. If it sees a word or phrase that it doesn’t know, the machine guesses what words or phrases might have similar meanings. It helps specifically with never-before-seen search queries. Apparently it’s better at humans (even Googlers) at guessing which results Google would rank number one for various queries. It’s the first ranking signal that actually learns on its own. Google has indicated in the past that turning RankBrain off would be as damaging to search results as turning off half of Wikipedia pages.

    Barry Schwartz reported on a session at SMX West earlier this month in which Google’s Paul Haahr, who is described as “a top engineer involved in core ranking,” admitted that Google itself doesn’t fully understand RankBrain.

    Now, Schwartz is pointing to a Twitter conversation with Google’s Gary Illyes and Moz’s Rand Fishkin in which it’s suggested that RankBrain can’t use a new factor that wasn’t previously in an algorithm, but it might adjust the weights of existing signals. Still, Illyes notes that while he’s on the search quality team, he doesn’t know everything about RankBrain.

    Last week, Stone Temple Consulting released some research on RankBrain’s effectiveness at improving Google search results. The data was gathered by comparing 500,000 search queries from both before and after RankBrain was implemented.

    They found that Google improved results on 54.6% of queries that it previously misunderstood. Examples of words and phrases RankBrain handles better, according to the firm, include: what is, who is, where is, without, not, and convert.

    Stone Temple’s Eric Enge suggested that Google may use RankBrain to impact selection of featured snippet results, trigger the delivery of a map where there wasn’t one shown before, and/or determine if the main impact of a given query would be an improved search results snippet.

    “Predictably, one of the most common questions I get asked is how RankBrain will impact SEO,” he said. “Truth be told, at the moment, there is not much impact at all. RankBrain will simply do a better job of matching user queries with your web pages, so you’d arguably be less dependent on having all the words from the user query on your page.”

    “In addition, you still need to do keyword research so that you can understand how to target a page to a major topic area (and what that major topic area is),” he added. “Understanding the preferred language of most users will always make sense, whether or not search engines exist. If you haven’t already (hopefully you have!), you can increase your emphasis on using truly natural language on your web pages.”

    According to Enge, the real impacts of RankBrain are an increase in overall search quality and in Google’s confidence that they can use machine-leaning within the core search algorithm.

    Be sure to check out Stone Temple’s study if you haven’t already. It includes a nice infographic outlining the highlights.

    Do you think RankBrain is a positive thing for search results? Discuss.

  • This Google Ranking Signal Is About to Get A Boost

    This Google Ranking Signal Is About to Get A Boost

    Google made mobile-friendliness a ranking signal about a year ago, and the company just announced that it’s about to have even more significance. Long story short, if you haven’t gone mobile-friendly yet, you should do that ASAP.

    Have you ensured that your site is mobile-friendly by Google’s standards? Have you checked it lately? Discuss.

    Google had this to say in a brief post on its Webmaster Central blog:

    Getting good, relevant answers when you search shouldn’t depend on what device you’re using. You should get the best answer possible, whether you’re on a phone, desktop or tablet. Last year, we started using mobile-friendliness as a ranking signal on mobile searches. Today we’re announcing that beginning in May, we’ll start rolling out an update to mobile search results that increases the effect of the ranking signal to help our users find even more pages that are relevant and mobile-friendly.

    If you’ve already made your site mobile-friendly, you will not be impacted by this update. If you need support with your mobile-friendly site, we recommend checking out the Mobile-Friendly Test and the Webmaster Mobile Guide, both of which provide guidance on how to improve your mobile site. And remember, the intent of the search query is still a very strong signal — so even if a page with high quality content is not mobile-friendly, it could still rank well if it has great, relevant content.

    Keep in mind, that even if you made your site mobile-friendly to prepare for this initial update last spring, there has been at least once significant change since then.

    In the fall, Google announced a new caveat to mobile-friendliness. You can’t use app install interstitials that hide the content of your mobile site. In fact, just the other day, Google indicated that it’s not a fan of sneaky workarounds for this either.

    “Instead of full page interstitials, we recommend that webmasters use more user-friendly formats such as app install banners,” Google said at the time. “We hope that this change will make it easier for searchers to see the content of the pages they are looking for.”

    Some app owners have found a way around this, but what they’re doing may not help them for much longer.

    Barry Schwartz at Search Engine Roundtable points to a Q&A in a Google webmaster hangout (start at 49 minutes in).

    Someone points out Yelp specifically as an example (which is interesting given the company’s vocal opposition to Google’s policy on this) of a mobile site that uses a “splash screen that’s not really a splash screen,” because it just makes the user scroll down.

    According to Google’s John Mueller, Google may take manual actions on things like this and may even penalize sites for such practices.

    Also since the initial launch of the mobile-friendly signal, Google launched Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP), its open source project, which a number of other tech and web companies have begun participating in.

    Google has indicated that AMP isn’t (at least for now) a direct ranking signal, but that it is one way to ensure mobile-friendliness. If nothing else, it should help in the page speed department. Google has also been giving AMP pages exclusive access to the mobile news carousel.

    The mobile-friendly update was billed “Mobilegeddon” by many outlets, but it didn’t quite become that. It remains to be seen if May will see a more significant impact.

    You can find Google’s mobile-friendly test tool here.

    Do you think it’s a good idea for Google to turn up the mobile-friendly signal? Share your thoughts.

    Image via Google

  • Study Dives Into Google’s Third Most Important Ranking Signal

    Study Dives Into Google’s Third Most Important Ranking Signal

    Google has been using one of its most important ranking signals for going on a year, and apparently it has so far helped improve search results on over half of queries.

    Have you noticed a marked improvement in Google search results over the past year? Let us know in the comments.

    Stone Temple Consulting, which has been publishing some of the most interesting research on Google search in recent memory, has some new findings out after a study on Google’s machine learning algorithm RankBrain. The data was gathered by comparing 500,000 search queries from both before and after RankBrain was implemented.

    According to the firm, and as far as we know, this is the only study of its kind on RankBrain.

    The study found that Google improved results on 54.6% of queries that it previously misunderstood. Examples of words and phrases RankBrain handles better, according to the firm, include: what is, who is, where is, without, not, and convert.

    RankBrain was revealed in October pretty much out of nowhere. It didn’t come in an official announcement, but from an interview Bloomberg Business ran with Greg Corrado, a senior research scientist at Google. He said that Google had introduced the algorithm on a wide scale earlier in the year and that it quickly became the third most important signal out of hundreds in Google’s ranking algorithm. Before we look more closely at Stone Temple’s findings, here’s a quick recqp of what we learned about RankBrain from that initial interview.

    1. RankBrain is the third most important ranking signal in Google Search.

    2. RankBrain was deployed several months before October.

    3. RankBrain uses artificial intelligence to put written language into mathematical entities (vectors) that computers can understand.

    4. If RankBrain sees a word/phrase it doesn’t know, the machine guesses what words/phrases might have similar meanings.

    5. RankBrain specifically helps with never-before-seen search queries.

    6. RankBrain is better than humans (even Googlers) at guessing which results Google would rank number one for various queries.

    7. RankBrain is the first Google search ranking signal that actually learns on its own.

    8. Turning RankBrain off is as damaging to users as turning off half of Wikipedia pages.

    9. RankBrain is so effective, Google engineers were surprised at how well it worked.

    10. Machine learning is a major focus of Google right now, which probably means we’ll see RankBrain itself and other endeavors in this area improve greatly in the future.

    Stone Temple’s Eric Enge suggests that Google may use RankBrain to impact selection of featured snippet results, trigger the delivery of a map where there wasn’t one shown before, and/or determine if the main impact of a given query would be an improved search results snippet.

    “Predictably, one of the most common questions I get asked is how RankBrain will impact SEO,” says Enge. “Truth be told, at the moment, there is not much impact at all. RankBrain will simply do a better job of matching user queries with your web pages, so you’d arguably be less dependent on having all the words from the user query on your page.”

    “In addition, you still need to do keyword research so that you can understand how to target a page to a major topic area (and what that major topic area is),” he adds. “Understanding the preferred language of most users will always make sense, whether or not search engines exist. If you haven’t already (hopefully you have!), you can increase your emphasis on using truly natural language on your web pages.”

    According to Enge, the real impacts of RankBrain are an increase in overall search quality and in Google’s confidence that they can use machine-leaning within the core search algorithm.

    Stone Temple put together this infographic highlighting its findings:


    On a related note, word out of SMX is that apparently Google doesn’t completely understand RankBrain and what it’s doing. Hmmm. Let’s hope the company has a better handle on what its nightmare-inducing robots are doing:

    Do you believe RankBrain is making Google a better search engine and helping users find what they’re looking for? Discuss.

    Infographic via Stone Temple Consulting

  • Google Posts to Give Public Figures, Organizations A Podium in Search Results

    Google Posts to Give Public Figures, Organizations A Podium in Search Results

    Google is trying out a new social media-like experiment in its search results. We all know how the whole Google+ thing has gone, and now it looks as though the company is trying a new, different approach.

    It’s called Google Posts, and for now it’s only available to U.S. presidential candidates. However, in time, Google intends to open the feature up to other prominent figures and organizations. If it ever goes beyond that remains to be seen. Figures and organizations join the waitlist right now though.

    The application is simple. It simply asks for name, email, and “additional notes”.

    Screen Shot 2016-03-08 at 9.52.51 AM

    “Every day millions of people search on Google, many of whom are looking for information about the upcoming presidential elections,” Google says. “Now there’s a way for users to hear directly from the candidates they’re searching for in real time on Google.”

    “US presidential candidates can now communicate with text, images and videos directly on Google,” it adds. “Creating content is fast and simple, and once published, posts will appear instantly in search results related to the candidate. Each post can also be shared on popular social networks, amplifying the message even further.”

    It will be interesting to see where Google goes with this. It’s also interesting that they’re doing this now that they have access to Twitter’s firehose for real-time tweets.

    Images via Google

  • Microsoft Adds New Tracking Parameters for URLs in Bing Ads

    Microsoft announced some new tracking parameters for URLs in Bing Ads. There are three new tags – {Campaign}, {AdGroup} and {Network}. Advertisers can add these to their landing page URLs to see where ads are appearing and what is triggering them to appear.

    “We understand how important it is for advertisers to gain additional insights about their paid search clicks,” says Microsoft’s Jamie Chung. “The more data you have, the easier it is to fine tune your campaign settings to improve performance that can help you reach valuable customers more easily.”

    “Dynamic text tags are powerful because Bing automatically will replace these tags with information relevant to the click so you can perform analytics and build richer reports about your landing pages,” Chung adds.

    Screen Shot 2016-03-08 at 9.08.16 AM

    You can see all Bing Ads URL tracking options and parameters here.

    Last week, Microsoft updated the Bing Ads Editor with native ad support and some additional features.

    Images via Microsoft

  • Google Talks Coming Penguin Update

    Google Talks Coming Penguin Update

    There’s no telling when Google will finally launch the next, much-anticipated Penguin update. Now, Google’s Gary Illyes, who has been hinting at dates over the past year (only to have these dates pass by penguinless) has said that he’s just not going to try to give any timeframe on it anymore.

    That said, it sounds like Google is still working on hard on the update, fine-tuning it and whatnot.

    Are you anxiously awaiting the Penguin roll-out? Do you think Google is taking too long or are you happy to wait as long as thy get it right? Do you expect them to get it right? Discuss.

    So the timeframe is really up in the air at this point. The last ballpark we got from Illyes was sometime this quarter, but we’re already into March now, and there’s no telling if that’s still the case, especially after his most recent comments.

    Illyes reportedly said in a session at the Search Marketing Expo event (paraphrasing) that he will no longer estimate when Penguin 4.0 will launch because he’s already been wrong several times and it’s “bad for business”.

    Several attendees at the conference have confirmed in tweets he said something along these lines.

    He did predict a launch this quarter, but in the past, it’s been suggested that it would happen in January, and before that, before the end of 2015. It’s been going on 17 months.

    Illyes spoke with Stone Temple Consulting this week. Naturally, he was prodded about Penguin.

    He said he hasn’t checked with the staff behind Penguin for a while, but that he does check in with them to ask about it. He said that like “any human,” that the Penguin folks have a “threshold for nagging,” suggesting if he keeps nagging them about it, they’ll stop answering. He said he “knows” they are running experiments, which people can’t see externally, regardless of if they think otherwise.

    “They are running the experiments, but we will also not launch something that we are not happy with,” he told Stone Temple. “With Penguin, it can have a very strong effect on a page, and we want to make sure that if Penguin affects a page, then we are absolutely sure that that page should be affected. We don’t want to negatively affect a page without a good reason.”

    Well, webmasters would be grateful for that much.

    He also said, “I mean, first there’s lots of brute tuning going on, and after a while, you reach a phase where you have to actually do really, really tiny fine-tuning on Penguin and algorithms in general. And sometimes that fine-tuning can actually take way more time than the brute tuning. We are working hard to launch it as soon as possible. I can’t say more than that.”

    Waiting on Google to push the new Penguin has grown increasingly frustrating for businesses impacted by the update in the past, who have lost search visibility and traffic and have no way to recover until the next one comes.

    Once the next one does come, it will supposedly be continuous, meaning that sites will no longer have to wait so long to recover in the future if they make the necessary adjustments.

    Gary Illyes confirmed this again, telling Stone Temple that if pages are affected by Penguin, “generally,” they will be able to “get rid of that effect much faster.”

    “So you will definitely be able to see that there is something going on, like your rankings are dropping,” he said. “You can easily think back what you did, what you changed, if anything, on the site or external to the site, like off-site SEO, or link building, or whatever, and then revert those changes and see if that fixes it.”

    He added that they’ll still have to recrawl, noting that his can still take a lot of time. He said, “It’s real-time with the data you have available, but you don’t have the data until you recrawl…”

    No, don’t go in expecting instant recovery exactly. Still, this process will be much preferred to the past state of affairs, and certainly compared to the months of waiting that are happening right now.

    I strongly recommend you read the full interview at Stone Temple, which touches on various other worthwhile topics in addition to Penguin.

    What are your thoughts about how Google has handled Penguin? Discuss.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Google Sends Search Traffic To AMP Pages

    Google Sends Search Traffic To AMP Pages

    We knew it was coming this week, but Google seems to be rolling it out a day earlier than expected.

    We’ve known since early December that Google would start sending search traffic to Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP) beginning sometime in February. Ad Age recently reported the launch would be on February 24, but people are already starting to see AMP pages being delivered by Google.

    Is Google showing you AMP pages on your mobile device? Tell us what you think about the experience.

    You’ll know if you see an AMP icon as in the image below.

    amp1

    Google is also now sending out emails telling people that Google Analytics now supports AMP analytics.

    In a recent post on the Google Analytics blog, Google wrote:

    amp2

    Google says you should use a separate Google Analytics property to measure your AMP pages, which could be a bit of an inconvenience (my words, not theirs), but as they note, AMP is still a new technology, so give it time.

    You can read more about AMP and analytics in a recent post on the AMP blog.

    The company said its goals for AMP, as the project pertains to advertising, are to ensure that it works well with the business models of today and that it leaves plenty of space for innovation in the future.

    “In the near term, our top priority is making sure that ad formats, features and measurement that publishers rely on work within the AMP environment,” said another post on the AMP blog. “When AMP launches on Google Search in February, it will include important, basic functionalities. These include the ability to traffic ads with ad servers of your choice, support for multiple demand sources and formats (including native ads), full control over ads placements, and viewability measurement. It also includes integration with 20+ ad tech vendors, all of whom are excited to participate in the AMP initiative.”

    Google has been hosting a series of Hangouts around different aspects of AMP to help you get prepared the launch (and you can always implement after the launch). I’d also recommend perusing the AMP blog for more details on everything from how it handles ads and analytics to paywalls.

    Google also has a new section in its Webmaster Help forums (via Search Engine Roundtable) where webmasters can ask questions about and discuss AMP. As Google’s John Mueller notes, they’re looking for feedback as well.

    AMP is of course about letting websites build light-weight pages for their content, and is similar to Facebook’s Instant Articles that way. Facebook also announced a date last week for when it will let all publishers to take advantage of that.

    Have you begun implementing AMP? Do you intend to? Let us know in the comments.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Google Integrates Places API with Google Maps Search

    Google announced that it has integrated the Places API with Google Maps search in an effort to offer more consistent search results across Google Maps and the API and provide better search quality for API responses.

    The company said it is modifying how it supports place type restrictions in the Places API web service and JavaScript library. As of February 8, they have replaced the types restriction parameter with a new type search parameter.

    This impacts developers who have been using the types parameter for Nearby Search, Text Search, or Radar Search.

    “Type search works similarly to types restriction, but it only supports one type per request,” said Google’s Marcelo Camelo. “Requests using the types parameter and those specifying multiple types (for example, types=hospital|pharmacy|doctor) will continue to return results until Feb 8, 2017, but we do not recommend using multiple types in a search request. After that date, requests with multiple types will no longer be supported. To ensure the best possible search results for your users, we recommend using a single type in search requests.”

    Google is also changing the list of supported types, dropping the types establishment, food, health, general_contractor, finance, and place_of_worship. These will no longer be available as searchable types as of February 8, 2017. The types will still be returned in search and details results.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Bing Mobile Apps Get Some Updates

    Bing Mobile Apps Get Some Updates

    Microsoft announced some updates to its Android and iPhone apps. While they company describes both updates as major, this is especially the case for Android.

    There’s a new mobile search experience on Google’s operating system.

    “The Bing App on Android brings together the information you need, connected to the apps you trust – all to help you “find” and “do” more faster and easier,” a spokesperson for the company said in an email.

    The app includes the Near Me feature to help you find things close to you, a Restaurants feature, a Movies feature (which shows movies organized by what’s new on Netflix, Amazon Prime, or genre), and Images and Videos, which shows popular people or animal searches or music and viral videos.

    The iPhone app gets a new barcode scanner that allows for product price comparison from an online catalog of retailers as well as a way to find the cheapest gas in the area.

    More on both app updates here.

    Images via Microsoft

  • Yelp Puts ‘Extortion Conspiracy Theory’ Back Into Spotlight

    Well, the Yelp “extortion” (or lack thereof) narrative is back in the news. For years, the company has been accused by business owners of burying positive reviews when the owners decline to pay for advertising on Yelp. Yelp has always strongly denied such things, pointing to failed lawsuits, studies, etc., but the stories and accusations have never gone away.

    Do you believe Yelp has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that such accusations are completely without merit? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    So why are we talking about this now? Mostly because Yelp itself is. The company has a new blog post out claiming that the “Yelp extortion conspiracy theory” has been “debunked…again.”

    More accurately, Yelp played some phone calls for a guy who works for an organization that a Yelp sales exec is the board member of, and it was concluded that there was no wrongdoing. It’s unlikely that this is going to make the narrative disappear.

    Vince Sollitto, SVP Communications and Public Affairs, writes, “Sometimes people claim Yelp gives more favorable ratings to businesses who advertise on our platform, and some even allege that Yelp threatens to manipulate ratings and reviews of those who don’t advertise. These claims are of course false and have already been scrutinized by courts of law, academic studies, and a closed FTC investigation. They are sensational, however, and the media has often repeated them at face value without doing any investigating or even real reporting. Until today.”

    He’s referring to a report from Greg Sterling, who wrote about a plumber he spoke with who told him “he had been solicited to advertise on the site and that he declined but was told by the telephone sales rep that his reviews could potentially be affected if he didn’t.”

    Yelp played 25 – 30 calls from Yelp to this plumber (only the Yelp side of the conversations are recorded) and concluded:

    There was nothing that sounded like a threat or any suggestion that reviews would be removed or otherwise altered by Yelp if the guy didn’t advertise. There wasn’t anything that could be construed as even implying that.

    If you’re a true conspiracy theorist you might now be inclined to believe that Yelp edited the records or omitted key conversations. But I can tell you it did not; I listened to the entire tiresome sequence of calls.

    Sterling says he believes Yelp’s version of the events after being “exposed to evidence that supported it.”

    Phil Rozek says in the comments on Sterling’s post, “Most of the time (in my experience), business owners’ complaints boil down to, ‘I said no to advertising, and then my reviews started disappearing.’ They wonder why reviews that initially got past the filter got filtered post facto, after the chat with the sales rep. It’s less often that they claim Yelp actually voiced something resembling a threat. I do think there are some rogue Yelp reps who gave business owners a shakedown, but I’ve seen nothing that to make me think it’s systemic.”

    Sterling replied to say, “One would assume that Yelp would aggressively stamp out any rogue sales people at this point to protect its reputation.”

    Rogue salespeople or not, Yelp’s defense and Sterling’s post may appear to “debunk” this particular plumber’s claim, but don’t really do much to do so for the common complaint Rozek speaks of.

    Something else worth noting here is that Sterling is the VP of Strategy and Insights for the Local Search Association, which is described as “a not-for-profit industry association of media companies, agencies and technology providers.” One of the board members for this association is Yelp Chief Revenue Officer Jed Nachman.

    From a Local Search Association press release from last year:

    Jed Nachman, Senior Vice President of Revenue, Yelp. Jed has been with Yelp since early 2007 and is responsible for leading Yelp’s rapidly growing sales, client services, and revenue operations groups, which span across four domestic locations as well as Europe. (emphasis ours).

    Since then, Nachman has been promoted to Chief Revenue Officer. This happened just last month when Yelp CEO Jeremy Stoppelman wrote:

    Since joining Yelp as Head of Local Sales in 2007, Jed has built our sales organization, including client services and revenue operations, from 10 to over 2000 team members. Along the way, Jed and his team have grown Yelp revenue from $500 thousand to $500 million. He has also been an integral member of our executive team — and helped establish our positive, energetic and highly accountable company culture. Now as Chief Revenue Officer, Jed will lead our local advertising business, take a more prominent role in company-wide planning and help push the company past the $1 billion revenue milestone.

    While there are many companies besides Yelp involved with the Local Search Association (which Nachman’s LinkedIn profile still says he is currently a part of), it certainly seems worth mentioning that the organization is tied to Nachman, even if Yelp didn’t deem it so for its blog post on the matter, which simply refers to Sterling as a “well-known analyst and thought leader”.

    To be clear, I don’t bring any of this up to discredit Sterling in any way. I’ve enjoyed his reporting on the search industry for many years. Yelp’s description of him is not wrong. It just leaves out his LSA connection, which Sterling does highlight in his own bio.

    In other words, I’m not implying that Sterling’s report is without merit. It just seems a little disingenuous on Yelp’s part to hold up a report from a guy who leads strategy for an organization with a direct connection to a guy who leads sales at Yelp as the only example of “real reporting” on this topic, especially considering that there’s a feature-length documentary full of interviews expected to be released soon.

    It of course remains to be seen whether the doc, titled “Billion Dollar Bully,” will be able to show us any hard hitting evidence to back up the claims so many people have made, but those who have been following the story for years will no doubt be very interested to see what is presented.

    Prost Production, the company behind the film did provide an update last week:

    We initially thought we would be finished filming this summer, but in true documentary fashion, the story has lead us down many paths that we felt compelled to follow. With all the footage we have acquired, we have been structuring, restructuring, and structuring again the story so that it is told in the best possible way.

    We thought we were done with production in November, but once again, an interview popped up that we couldn’t miss out on and were out filming just last Sunday. Now, we are 99.9% certain we are completely done! The film is near picture lock but needs a little more tweaking. In a few weeks we will be sharing a cut of the film with Kickstarter backers who contributed at the Executive Producer level. We hope to be sharing a finished project with everyone not too long after that!

    Thank you again for your interest in this project. We want to ensure this story is factually-based and done correctly. It takes time to get there, especially when this is such a grassroots effort with a very small crew. It would be a disservice to all those who have participated in the making of this film (supporters, interviewees, etc) if we put out something quickly just for the sake of having a movie. We look forward to sharing details soon about when and where it can be seen.

    I encourage you read Sterling’s post here and check out Billion Dollar Bully when it is released, which will almost certainly present a very different side of the story.

    In other Yelp news, the company announced that it has issued a new round of consumer alerts warning people about 37 businesses busted for violating Yelp policies.

    What do you make of Yelp’s defense? Do you expect the documentary to provide any real evidence? Discuss.

    Image via Yelp (Flickr)

  • Google’s Search Leader Amit Singhal Is Moving On

    Google’s Search Leader Amit Singhal Is Moving On

    Matt Cutts, who to many webmasters and online marketers, was basically the face of Google Search for many years, stepped away in 2014. Now, Amit Singhal, who has led the company’s search efforts, is moving on.

    Singhal announced the news in a letter on Google+ today, saying that after fifteen years with the company, he wants to spend more time with his family and get more involved with philanthropy.

    According to him, Google Search remains in good hands – those of “an outstanding set of senior leaders who are already running the show day-to-day.”

    Things are certainly changing a lot with the company’s management these days. As you know, last year, Google got a new CEO and became part of Alphabet (which posted impressive earnings earlier this week).

    Singhal is reportedly being replaced by research and machine learning exec John Giannandrea, who worked on Knowledge Graph.

    Singhal’s full letter, titled “The Journey Continues…” is below:

    Dear Friends,

    My life has been a dream journey. From a little boy growing up in the Himalayas dreaming of the Star Trek computer, to an immigrant who came to the United States with two suitcases and not much else, to the person responsible for Search at Google, every turn has enriched me and made me a better person.

    As I entered the fifteenth year of working at Google, I’ve been asking myself the question, “what would you want to do for the next fifteen?” The answer has overwhelmingly been: give back to others. It has always been a priority for me to give back to people who are less fortunate, and make time for my family amidst competing work constraints–but on both fronts, I simply want to give and do more.

    Now is a good time to make this important life change. Things are in amazing shape. Search is stronger than ever, and will only get better in the hands of an outstanding set of senior leaders who are already running the show day-to-day.

    It fills me with pride to see what we have built in the last fifteen years. Search has transformed people’s lives; over a billion people rely on us. Our mission of empowering people with information and the impact it has had on this world cannot be overstated. When I started, who would have imagined that in a short period of fifteen years, we would tap a button, ask Google anything and get the answer. Today, it has become second nature to us. My dream Star Trek computer is becoming a reality, and it is far better than what I ever imagined.

    I love Google. It is a company that believes in doing the right thing, a company that believes in doing good in the world, a company… that cares. I look back at my time here with a profound sense of gratitude that I was a part of building this. Now, with pride, gratitude, and joy in my heart, I need to define my next fifteen years. I am eager to see what kind of impact I can make philanthropically, and of course, to spend more time with my family–especially with my wife who I miss spending time with given our incredibly busy lives, and our son who will go to college soon, leaving an empty nest behind.

    Feb 26 will be my last day at Google. My relationships are the most important thing I’ve accumulated in life and I’d love for that to continue. Please do drop me a line occasionally and we can have a cup of tea.

    As Chief Si’ahl said “Take nothing but memories, leave nothing but footprints!” I am taking so many fond memories with me, and hopefully I’ve left a small footprint here.

    With Love,
    Amit

    Image via Twitter

  • Yahoo Gets Some Search Updates

    Yahoo Gets Some Search Updates

    Yahoo has been making a lot of product announcements this week. First it announced a new homepage and mobile app, then some enhancements to Yahoo Mail.

    Now, the company is announcing some search updates in time for some big events (the Super Bowl, the primaries, and the Oscars).

    Yahoo’s Paul Yiu explains, “Now, with a quick search for the Carolina Panthers or the Denver Broncos, you can see past score and schedule information, find the top performing players, and check out their entire roster, complete with current stats. Just click on an athlete, like Cam Newton, to learn more. We’ll even show you the live score as the two teams face off next weekend. And if you’re looking for a Golden State Warriors update, getting ready for MLB season or just want to learn more about the NHL, we’ve got you covered! Yahoo Search shows you the information you want for the “Big Four” and all major soccer leagues.”

    “Since we know you often search for the latest poll results, how much money a candidate’s campaign has raised and top contributors, we want you to have access to this information without having to search-click, search-click, search,” says Yiu. “Without leaving the search results page, a query for a presidential hopeful will bring you this information up front. You can also research a candidate’s stance on big issues like healthcare and national security, to get up to speed and pick the right presidential hopeful in the upcoming primary.”

    You can search a movie and get showtimes near you, Rotten Tomatoes scores, a description, and recommendations for other movies.

    More on Yahoo’s new homepage features here.

    Image via Yahoo

  • Google Penguin Update Timeframe Now ‘This Quarter’

    Google Penguin Update Timeframe Now ‘This Quarter’

    The much anticipated Google Penguin update has been expected this month, but from the sound of it, that’s unlikely at this point. Google’s Gary Illyes mentioned on Twitter (via Search Engine Roundtable) that it is probably “weeks” off and that Google is aiming for this quarter.

    For a significant part of last year, Google suggested that the update could hit before the end of 2015. That was until the end of 2015 actually approached, and they hinted at a January launch.

    Eight days into January, Illyes said he hadn’t seen the experiment results.

    It’s worth noting that Illyes isn’t actually on the team that works on Penguin even if he generally serves as one of the main messengers to webmasters.

    As you probably know by now, this Penguin update is supposed to go real-time, so it will continuously update without webmasters having to wait forever for a refresh if they happen to be impacted by it and need to make changes to their site to recover visibility in search results.

    Image via Thinkstock

  • 4 New Features In Bing Ads Keyword Planner

    Microsoft announced some enhancements to the Bing Ads Keyword Planner tool to give advertisers more insights into their campaigns. There are four new capabilities.

    First is new competitive insights and benchmarking. Advertisers can now review relative ad impression share for keyword suggestions in addition to search trend, competition, and suggested bid information as previously provided. Advertisers can compare their ad impression share to competitor domains and market leader domains.

    Second is customizable ad group and keyword bids.

    “In the traffic estimates page, you can change the bids (in the ‘Max. CPC’ column) for individual ad groups and keywords and then see the traffic estimates based on them,” explains Microsoft’s Jessica Cui. “If your keywords have different bid amounts, the bid landscape graph will show the estimated performance and spend for each bid percentage change. To adjust all your bids by the same percentage, just hover and click on the desired percentage directly in the graph.”

    Third is a new source for keyword suggestions. In addition to seed keywords you can use for searching for new keywords, you can now input the URL of specific landing pages on your website (or your whole site) to get more suggestions.

    Finally, the new version of Keyword Planner lets you customize time range up to 24 months for keyword search volume.

    “We got a lot of asks about customizing the result by date range instead of the default last 12 months after Keyword Planner was released in September….now it’s available!” says Cui. “You can now set the time period up to last 24 months to get a more holistic view of the keywords trending year over year. Thus, you can allocate your budget for the coming period by referencing performance history. This should be especially helpful when running a seasonal campaign and need to look for trending keywords; you can get suggestions that are particularly relevant during certain period of the seasonal event.”

    All features are now available when you sign in.

    Image via Bing

  • It Looks Like Instagram Is Improving Search Again

    It Looks Like Instagram Is Improving Search Again

    Last summer, Instagram made some big changes to its search functionality including the addition of Places Search and some other new discovery avenues. It also expanded search from mobile to desktop.

    They’re tinkering around with search once again. Photographer Anthony Quintano (via TheNextWeb) noticed that the app is now showing some Facebook-like functionality, showing who follows you back in search results:

    The functionality isn’t working for all users. It could just be a limited test, but it’s also possible that it will roll out to more users over time.

    Image via Instagram (Facebook)

  • Google+ App Gets Update, Improved Search

    Google+ App Gets Update, Improved Search

    Google announced the launch of a new update for its Google+ Android app to version 7.0.0. The update has begun rolling out, and will continue over the next day or two.

    “This version includes two of our most requested Android fixes and a number of additional updates,” says Luke Wroblewski in a Google+ update (via 9to5Google).

    Screen Shot 2016-01-14 at 11.04.14 AM

    The update includes (via Wroblewski):

    – 69 bugs fixes

    – 14 accessibility issues addressed

    – Automatically hide the bottom tab bar when scrolling (note: not on Notifications screen yet)

    – The home stream now remembers your position when you return to it (after going to a different screen like Notifications)

    – Search now displays autocomplete suggestions as you type

    – If you have no Collections or Communities visible on your profile, we include a prompt for you to add one

    Find the updated app on Google Play here.

    Image via Google+

  • Biz Stone’s Jelly Is Back With ‘Entirely New’ Approach

    Biz Stone’s Jelly Is Back With ‘Entirely New’ Approach

    Two years ago, Twitter co-founder Biz Stone launched Jelly, a new Q&A service serving as “a new way to search.”

    It got a lot of attention for a little while there…until it didn’t. The world largely forgot about its existence, and they even stopped working on it. Now it’s back.

    Stone took to Medium to share his “renewed enthusiasm” and “entirely new approach” to the product.

    “When we launched the first version of Jelly we learned something interesting,” he explains. “We had way more answers than questions. It turns out that people love to share what they know—especially when it’s about their favorite spot, hobby, and general area of expertise. That’s why this time around, there’s no account needed to ask a question. You only create an account if you want to answer or otherwise engage.”

    “Yes, traditional search engines return thousands of results in a fraction of a second,” he continues. “However, it’s your job to figure out which results are ads (hint: they’re usually the top results), which results are highly ranked because the people who built that web site know how to game the system, and which results might actually be of some help. Often you go through many pages and try different keywords. All of this takes time.”

    “We’ve decided not to measure our success by how fast we can show you a massive quantity of possible answers, or how much time you spend on our service. Once you ask a question on Jelly, you can go do something else. We’ll let you know when someone has answered your question. So, it’s not instantaneous, but it’s timely, and you’re getting quality over quantity. We think people will like this. (We do!)”

    Will they though? I’m all for new ways of finding helpful information, but I just don’t see this panning out any better this time around than the last time. Typically when people the answer to a question, they want it right away. They often NEED it right away. Thanks to advances in search technology, people expect instant gratification more than ever. Google often answers their questions directly before pointing them to search results. It gets better and better at it as time goes on.

    If they want answers from people, they turn to Twitter, Facebook, etc. This just seems like a huge uphill battle.

    Either way, if you want to give Jelly a shot, you’re going to have to wait. It’s in closed beta right now, but Stone says it will launch soon. They’re also hiring.

    Image via Jelly

  • Bing Talks 2016 Search Predictions, Looks At ’15 Trends

    Bing Talks 2016 Search Predictions, Looks At ’15 Trends

    Microsoft is talking up the importance of search to marketers looking for “smart brand connections”.

    In doing so, it shares a look at the top marketing buzzwords searched in the U.S. last year:

    David Pann, General Manager of Microsoft Search Advertising goes on to make seven search predictions for 2016. These boil down to:

    1. Search marketing will harness the majority of digital marketing spend

    2. Search as critical to informed real-time business decisions

    3. Search will drive marketer productivity and claim a bigger stake in the marketing mix

    4. Paid Search advertising strategy will go beyond the keyword to audience and action buying

    5. Mobility is the realm of personalization

    6. Voice search drives new behavior and understanding for marketers

    7. Using data to predict outcome

    Pann elaborates on each of these (quite a bit actually) in his post, so give it a read.

    Bing, as you may know, now powers AOL Search worldwide and because of this got some updates to Bing Ads. More on that here.

    Images via Bing