WebProNews

Tag: Search

  • Google Panda Update: Another Tweak Suspected

    Google Panda Update: Another Tweak Suspected

    It looks like webmasters recently felt the affects of another Google Panda Update tweak. Since what’s come to be known as version 2.5, Google has been making tweaks to it as promised, and these tweaks continue to help some sites and hurt others.

    Search Engine Roundtable points to some webmaster discussion, indicating that a tweak may have rolled out on October 20. There are indeed plenty of complaints in a WebmasterWorld thread here. Most are calling it a minor update, but even the minor updates can be major for some sites.

    User Bewenched wrote, for example, “It may have been a ‘minor’ update, but it slammed our ecommerce site yet again… down 30%”

    We’ve reached out to Google for confirmation that this was indeed Panda. As you may know, they make hundreds of algorithm changes a year. We’ll update when we receive a response.

    Update: Google tells WebProNews there was no Panda tweak on October 20.

    If you feel like you’ve been unjustifiably hit by the Google Panda Update, Google recommends that you let them know in this forum thread. For other resources, that may help you, we recently created this Delicious stack of Panda resources (which by the way is still a work in progress. Feel free to share other resources you think would be helpful, and we’ll consider adding them).

  • Google Taps Your Site Content To Generate Ads

    Google announced the launch of Dynamic Search Ads, which let advertisers target relevant searches with dynamic ads generated directly from their site. It’s in limited beta for now.

    “For many online businesses, each day you might have hundreds of new listings, items that temporarily change availability, or items that are permanently removed from stock,” AdWords Product Management Director Baris Gultekin says, explaining the thinking behind the new offering. “And at the same time, user search behavior can be a moving target — each day,16% of searches that occur, Google has never seen before. So even well-managed AdWords campaigns containing thousands of keywords can miss relevant searches, experience delays getting ads written for new products, or get out of sync with what’s actually available on your web site.  That’s not great for advertisers. It’s also not great for end users, who appreciate relevant ads linked to landing pages with in-stock items that perfectly match what they’re searching for.”

    Google says it maintains a fresh index of advertisers’ inventory using Google’s organic web search technology. When a relevant search occurs, Google (in theory) dynamically generates an ad with a headline based on the query, and text based on the advertiser’s most relevant landing page.

    This could be pretty cool if it works like it’s supposed to.

    “The ad enters the auction and competes normally — but we’ll hold it back for any search where you also have an eligible keyword-targeted ad,” says Gultekin. “So you get additive results from broader exposure for more of your in-stock inventory, without disrupting your existing keyword campaigns.”

    The new ads are available in all countries and languages, but the product is in limited beta. Interested advertisers are directed to join the interest list by contacting their Google account rep or signing up here.

  • Gaddafi Shows Why Google is Failing Its Mission in Search

    As you may recall, Google used to have a realtime search feature. When some topic was hot at any given time, and you did just a plain Google search on that topic, Google would show realtime results mixed right in with the regular results, and you can actually see them rolling in in realtime. It was quite useful in many cases, particularly in breaking news situations. Even when it didn’t automatically show up in the search results it was available as an option from the left panel. It was always a useful tool to see what people were saying about anything during the moment.

    Do you miss Google’s realtime search feature? Let us know in the comments. Find this topic interesting? Why not share this article on StumbleUpon, Facebook, Twitter, or Google+?

    The absence of realtime search is glaringly evident on a day like today. This morning, everyone was scrambling to find out the latest on Muammar Gaddafi. As of the time of this writing, the best Google could do on search results, in terms of timeliness, was a news story from about a half hour ago. That may or may not be the best result, but it doesn’t help me for finding the very latest, especially in a situation like this where people are frequently tweeting from Tripoli.

    No, in this case, Google is no doubt driving a lot of people to Twitter Search, simply because they’re not meeting the demand. It seems like a fundamental problem for Google when it is not meeting a search-related demand, given that Google is at its core, still a search company. It’s mission is “to organize the world‘s information and make it universally accessible and useful.”

    Well, realtime information is generally useful when it is accessible in real time.

    All Twitter is reporting that Twitter CEO Dick Costolo indicated we should not expect Twitter and Google to come to an agreement to renew their deal any time soon.

    That said, Google has indicated in the past that it would bring realtime search back, using data from other sources, including Google+. It had other sources before, but it was clear that Twitter dominated the results. This point was made even clearer when they just removed the feature entirely after losing Twitter data. Apparently, it just wasn’t even good enough to offer without Twitter.

    So now, they want Google+ updates to replace it. I’m not so sure if there’s enough material there, however. Larry Page announced during the company’s earnings call last week that Google+ surpassed 40 million members, but how many of them are posting public updates as often as Twitter users tweet? One key obstacle here is that Google+ was designed to offer users the maximum amount of control when sharing updates. This Circles method of sharing practically encourages people not to share data publicly, so that’s less data for the realtime search engines, although I could see Google including results from people in your Circles that were shared with you. But I don’t know if that’s enough to make a huge difference.

    One thing, in terms of data from other sources, that could work to Google’s advantage, is the subscribe feature recently launched by Facebook. Facebook users can now let people subscribe to their profiles without having to actually be friends with them. This no doubt encouraged a lot of people to share more stuff publicly, knowing that people might want to subscribe to their posts, as if they were following them on Twitter. Again, though, I don’t know if there is enough here to make a huge difference, because Facebook and Twitter are just different in the way most people share info.

    Twitter is public by default. It’s just a better source of public realtime data that is unrivaled at this point. That’s just how it is. Without Twitter, Google’s realtime search will never be as good as it could be with it. Unless people stop using Twitter, and it doesn’t look like that will be happening anytime soon.

    Just how important is realtime search? Well, that depends on the user, but as I said, this whole Gaddafi thing is a prime example of when its absence is incredibly obvious. On the anniversary of 9/11, Danny Sullivan reminded us of how awful it was trying to find the latest info about the attacks when they happened. Imagine how much easier that would have been in the realtime search era.

    Realtime search is clearly important enough for other companies to continue to try and improve upon it. Just in the last week or two, we’ve seen new offerings from Bitly, Topsy, and even Google+ itself.

    While each of these options may have be useful, and can probably co-exist with one another, I think most people that think about searching for what’s happening right now, think about Twitter. In fact, if you go to Twitter’s search page, it actually says, “See what’s happening right now.”

    Without the ability to search “what’s happening right now,” Google has at least one weakness in search, and is simply not a complete search engine.

    What do you think? Does Google need to get Twitter data back for realtime search? How important is realtime search to you? Let us know in the comments.

  • Flow Visualization Comes to Google Analytics

    Flow Visualization Comes to Google Analytics

    Google announced the launch of Flow Visualization in Google Analytics. This is described as a tool that lets you analyze site insights graphically, and instantly understand how visitors flow across pages on your site.

    There are actually two flow visualizations upon launch: Visitors Flow and Goal Flow. These will be rolling out to all accounts starting this week. More visualizations will come out later.

    Visitors Flow shows who visitors flow through your site by traffic source or other dimensions, and see the path they take to the exit. This could be a pretty helpful tool in analyzing bounces and exits and useful for trying to reduce them. This visualization is shown in the image above.

    “Nodes are automatically clustered according to an intelligence algorithm that groups together the most likely visitor flow through a site,” explains Phil Mui of the Google Analytics team. “You’ll also notice that we made the visualization highly interactive. You can interact with the graph to highlight different pathways, and to see information about specific nodes and connections. For example, if you want to dive deeper into your “specials” set of pages, you can hover over the node to see more at a glance.”

    Goal Flow, pictured below, shows how visitors flow through your goal steps and where they dropped off. ” Because the goal steps are defined by the site owner, they should reflect the important steps and page groups of interest to the site,” says Mui. “In this first iteration, we’re supporting only URL goals, but we’ll soon be adding events and possibly other goal types.”

    Goal Flow  

    He says Goal Flow helps you understand the relative volume of visits by dimension (traffic, source, campaign, browser), the rates at which visitors abandon different paths, where and how visitors navigate the steps you define, and how they interact with your site (in terms of things like backtracking to previous goal steps).

    Any advanced segments can be applied to a Flow Visualizer, and you can even visualize “backward” to see reverse paths to “identify suboptimal content”.

    In the comments on Google’s announcement, people are already calling the feature a game changer. Do you agree?

  • Google Tells You Exactly Where To Let Them Know When You’ve Been Hit By Panda

    Google’s Kaspar Szymanski wrote a Google+ update yesterday afternoon, “Here’s the uber long thread on #Google webmaster help forum; if you think your legitimate, original content site has been affected by our #Panda update please feel free to let us know and tune in. We also have escalation forums where webmasters can escalate non-English sites in order to help us fine tune recent algorithms.

    Szymanski is a “Google web spam fighter,” who says his occupation is “hunting web spam in Google search results and spearheading Google’s webmaster outreach efforts.

    The thread is here, and it is long indeed. 163 pages long.

    Google is indeed watching it though. Google’s John Mueller responded to a Barry Schwartz post when he suggested that it might be easy for Google to miss a post in such a long thread. Mueller wrote, “It’s certainly easier to follow a single thread than to follow lots of threads spread out across the web. Even if not all of the issues have the same cause, it makes it easier to track them, and pass possible issues on where appropriate.”

    “If we follow as they get posted, we don’t have to go through the previous posts,” he said. “I subscribe to threads like these via email, it makes it easier to focus on the new posts, do a preliminary diagnosis and forward things where appropriate.” He later added that he sees it more as a feed than a discussion thread.

    Users can subscribe to email alerts or RSS for when new replies are posted.

    On a semi-related note, I ran across this video being shared on Google+. It doesn’t have anything to do with Google, but it has a Panda doing mean things, so I thought it seemed worth passing on.

  • Google Encrypted Search Means No Info For Individual Queries

    Google announced that it is going to begin encrypting search queries with SSL (Secure Sockets Layer) as the default experience at Google.com when you search logged into your Google account. http://www.google.com will become https://www.google.com.

    “This is especially important when you’re using an unsecured Internet connection, such as a WiFi hotspot in an Internet cafe,” says Google product manager Evelyn Kao.

    There’s a chance that your Google experience will be slower with SSL because the computer your’e using has to establish a secure connection with Google. This is interesting, considering that Google has put so much effort into speeding things up.

    It’s worth noting that you can just go to https://www.google.com when you’re signed out, and still use encrypted search.

    Naturally, webmasters and SEOs are contemplating the effects this will have on search engine optimization and analytics.

    Sites visited from Google’s organic listings will be able to tell that the traffic is coming from Google, but they won’t be able to receive info about each individual query. They will, however, receive an aggregated list of the top 1,000 search queries that drove traffic to the site for each of the past 30 days in Webmaster Tools.

    “This information helps webmasters keep more accurate statistics about their user traffic,” says Kao. “If you choose to click on an ad appearing on our search results page, your browser will continue to send the relevant query over the network to enable advertisers to measure the effectiveness of their campaigns and to improve the ads and offers they present to you.”

    “When a signed in user visits your site from an organic Google search, all web analytics services, including Google Analytics, will continue to recognize the visit as Google ‘organic’ search, but will no longer report the query terms that the user searched on to reach your site,” says Amy Chang on the Google Analytics blog. “Keep in mind that the change will affect only a minority of your traffic. You will continue to see aggregate query data with no change, including visits from users who aren’t signed in and visits from Google ‘cpc’.”

    “We are still measuring all SEO traffic. You will still be able to see your conversion rates, segmentations, and more,” she adds. “To help you better identify the signed in user organic search visits, we created the token ‘not provided)’ within Organic Search Traffic Keyword reporting. You will continue to see referrals without any change; only the queries for signed in user visits will be affected. Note that ‘cpc’ paid search data is not affected.”

    Google is making the encrypted search available on all of its search properties except for Maps.

  • Google Panda Update: More Recovery Stories

    Google’s Panda update has been shaking up the web for better or worse all year, and for the longest time, there wasn’t a whole lot in the way of recovery stories. Eventually, we started to hear about some – perhaps most notably – that of DaniWeb, which after managing to make a 110% recovery, was hit again (and then recovered again shortly thereafter as Google continued to tweak the update).

    Google continues to tweak the update and make additional algorithm changes, and we’re hearing more stories about recoveries from Panda. SearchMetrics recently reported that various sites it had previously reported as losing search visibility due to Panda had bounced back.

    Remember FonerBooks that we talked about earlier this year? Morris Rosenthal, who runs that site, had written a guest post for us about Panda. Now, he is talking about a different site of his making a recovery. “My IFITJAMS site, which got crushed by Panda in April, recovered with no changes in the September update, and is now getting a 3X to 4X boost from the latest Panda,” he tells us.

    “The main ways it differs from my other two sites that were hit by Panda and didn’t recover is that it has far fewer links and authority,” he says. “Go figure. Now, at a tenth the size of the smaller, it gets as much Google traffic as both of them put together.”

    He has a whole post about his Panda experiences here, including the following charts:

    IFITJAMS graph  

    Rosenthal's sites

    That YouTube tie-in part is certainly interesting, considering that we know YouTube has been a consistent winner in the Panda update.

    Scott Conlon, President of MyAreaNetwork shared another recovery story with us. “While the Google Panda update definitely hurt our business and profits over the last few months, we now have a better website for our community,” he tests WebProNews. “Without the Panda update, our websites would not have had a complete redesign for a while.  So through all the damage that was caused to even quality sites like ours, there is a lot of good that comes in the end.  We all want to make the Internet a better experience for everyone.  Google is helping drive that initiative.  No hard feelings Google!”

    He shared more details about this story in an email, which I’ll just include here, so you can get it in his own words:

    813area.com is part of our national network of local area websites, MyAreaNetwork.  We have over 75 areas launched but since we are based and expanding out of Tampa, 813area.com has been our golden child.  

    We support Local Businesses!  813area is not just a local website.  We get connected with the community through local outreach programs, sponsoring and promoting of events and encouraging local commerce.

    All of MyAreaNetwork’s websites were hit by the Google Panda update on April 12, 2011.  Our immediate reaction was to frantically look for what caused the drop.  We had been investing quite a bit into content and promotions at that time and began to feel devastated.

    Over the next week we realized we had been a victim of the Panda update.  At first we thought it can be fixed quickly.  Remove all our low quality pages, drop anything that might be duplicate content, disallow crawlers from non-content related pages and we should be fine.  We never once doubted our content and have never been involved in link building programs, so we felt we were being mistakenly penalized.

    After a couple weeks we decided to focus on user experience.  We continued to follow the Google Webmaster Forums, Matt Cutts and other spokesmen for the Google algorithm changes.  When a company loses over 50% of their traffic, they are also losing over 50% of their revenue.  There were times that I thought we would have to lay-off some of our employees or even take our company in a whole new direction; however, we kept at it day in and day out.

    Over the next several months we focused on user experience.  We redeveloped the websites in a complete new structure that would allow for us to easily add new features, create a mobile friendly experience (still in progress) and make the content easier to find and read.  More energy was focused on building direct traffic and referral traffic so that we were not so “dependent” on Search.  

    Regarding content, we continued with our plan to keep building content.  Adding business listings, posting events and writing articles.  In fact we even built upon our CMS to bring on new contributing authors and will be launching a platform to bring on more writers.  Our content is not going in the direction of a content farm by any means.  We are focused on local content such as community events, local businesses and local organizations.

    On October 14th, just over five months later, 813area.com had a complete rebound of Google search traffic.  In fact, our Google traffic was up 11% higher YOY compariing Friday to Friday.  Immediately we thought all of our sites would rebound but that was not the case.  813area.com was the only site within our network that would recover.

    With this recovery, we are confident that we can get all of our sites out of the hole.  We feared that because we were a network of websites that everything was penalized together.  We will continue to focus on the user and building content for the users to share, engage with and not simply to find in search results.

    Key steps we took to recovery:
    – Removed low quality pages from Google index
    – Removed tickets.813area.com subdomain from index as this is the same content on all our websites
    – Changed title and meta tags removing any sign of keyword stuffing
    – Implementing schema.org markup on our Events, Business Listings and Articles
    – Complete redesign of our site structure from a side navigation to top navigation with very little to no table elements
    – Implementing HTML5 to be prepared for future development
    – Focused article content on user (i.e. more compelling titles, call to actions)

  • Facebook Failures, Twitter Manners & Content for SEO

    In today’s infographic round-up, we get a look at Facebook’s “Wall of Shame,” manners on Twitter, how content pertains to SEO.

    View more daily infographic round-ups here.

    Wordstream looks at Facebook’s “Wall of Shame”:

    Facebook's wall of shame

    Marketing Optimist and One Lily look at Twitter manners:

    Manners and Twitter

    Brafton looks at Content for SEO:

    SEO and Content  

  • Google Panda Update: Cutts Confirms Another Tweak

    As previously reported, Google’s Matt Cutts tweeted out on October 5 to “expect some Panda-related flux in the next few weeks, but will have less impact than previous updates (~2%).”

    SearchMetrics has since shared numbers for sites it found to have bounced back. DaniWeb, which originally tipped us off to the most recent major Panda update (commonly referred to as 2.5), saw a recovery even before that.

    When asked if there was a “minor Panda update” on October 14 (Friday), Matt Cutts replied on Twitter:

    @maheshhari late last night, yes. 2 days ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    Indeed, a number of webmasters reported over the weekend in various forums that they experienced some level of change that would coincide with Matt’s response. Some saw ups, some saw downs, and others saw little to no change.

    Search Engine Roundtable has an interesting look at people who have lost their jobs because of the Panda Update. Barry Schwartz, who runs that site, ran a poll for which he got 250 responses, with the following results:

    Panda Jobs Poll  

    This isn’t the first we’ve seen of the Google Panda update killing jobs. You may recall earlier this year when Mahalo’s Jason Calacanis announced he had to reduce his staff in response to the update. More recently, we’ve seen Demand Media implement a drastic reduction in new article assignments for its freelance writers as part of a larger effort to increase the overall quality of its sites like eHow, which has (or at least had) the reputation as the kind of site the Panda update was designed to have an impact on.

    There’s an entire thread about unemployment caused by Panda in Google’s own Webmaster Central forums. The initial question asked in that is, “How many people are now unemployed due to Google’s launch of the Panda update?”

    The response listed as the “best answer” is: “How many people are employed because of all the free traffic that website[s] get from Google?”

    The guy that started the thread said he started with 15 layoffs (3 administration staff, 1 editor, 9 writers and 2 artists).

    One SEO manager said, “I have more clients today after Panda, so I am happy with it.”

    Despite Demand Media’s reduction in article assignments, and starting out as kind of the poster child for what not to do in terms of what the Panda update goes after, the company has also kind of taken the poster child role for how to move on from Panda, in terms of diversification of traffic sources and becoming less reliant on Google, and instead putting more focus on quality and driving traffic from social sources and content distribution partnerships.

    The lesson here is that while Google can be a tremendous source of traffic, you’d do well to put the effort into creating and improving upon other sources. Google is not going to stop altering its algorithm. Even if you’ve managed to do well so far with regards to Panda survival, you could be hit by another iteration of it, or some other algorithmic change entirely.

  • Does SEO Help Or Hurt User Experience?

    Jeremy Schoemaker, who runs the popular Shoemoney blog, wrote a post about a year and a half ago called “Where My Hatred of SEO Comes From“. It’s basically about site owners who put more effort into pleasing the search algorithms than pleasing users. Given the impact Google’s Panda update has had on a lot of sites, the topic of discussion seems as relevant as ever.

    Would you make a change to your site if you knew it would help you in search, but your users would hate? Let us know in the comments. And if you find this topic interesting, why not share it on StumbleUpon, Facebook, Twitter, Google+, LinkedIn, etc.

    Editor’s note: The opinions expressed in this article belong to those who expressed them, and do not necessarily reflect those of WPN.

    On the one hand, the update is aimed at getting sites that do provide a quality experience ranked better, but on the other hand, it’s sent sites into a frenzy trying to appease Google’s algorithms (though the smart ones have tried to find ways to become less dependent on Google for traffic).

    We had a conversation with Schoemaker about search quality and site quality, as well as one with Atlas Web Service owner and President Michael Gray, whom Schoemaker referenced in his original article as having turned off the comments on his blog, as being an example of worrying more about search than users.

    “I think its a big mistake to completely turn off blog comments,” Schoemaker tells WebProNews. “I recently switched ShoeMoney.com over to Facebook comments.  In doing so I lost a TON of user generated content.  Over 140,000 comments  in all and now they are down probably 80-90%.  The ones that are now are 100% real people and since their name is attached there are real conversations and discussions taking place.”

    Facebook Comments

    “It’s once again enjoyable for me to engage with our commentators,” he adds.

    One factor to consider with comments might be how they impact a page’s quality in terms of how the Panda update looks at content.

    As far as comments impacting a site, Schoemaker says he called a Google engineer friend and asked about that. He says he was told that if anything, it’s “diluting the quality score of my page” by possibly diluting overall keyword density. Another factor could be the few common comments that go through that are clearly spam send signals that the page is not being well maintained.

    “So he said he did not see a positive to leaving indexable comments on my site,” Schoemaker says. That’s when the allusion to a Google+-based comments system we told you about recently came up.

    Michael Gray turned off his comments in July of 2009, and even went so far as to completely delete all old comments in April 2010. “It was one of the best decisions I made, and regret not doing it sooner,” Gray tells us.

    Michael Gray talks comments and SEO

    “Lots of people hate it, especially the unicorn and rainbow crowd, who say it’s not a blog and has no sense of community,” he adds. “To be honest I’m not building a community, I’m not looking to hand out gold stars, trophies or make people feel better, special or that they belong. I’m a thought leader, I have my views, opinions, messages that I want to spread, and vision of where I want my blog to go. There’s a reason there’s only one captain on a ship. Are comments 100% useless? Obviously not, but they aren’t part of my vision. Actually they were an obstacle, and were holding me back.”

    “Is my decision the right one for everyone? No, but there is no law, rule, or guideline that says you have to have comments or that you have to build a community or tribe,” he adds. “Sometimes you standout by doing what everyone else tells you is wrong or crazy. There are pros & cons no matter which way you go, any consultant or employee who tells you you have to ‘have’ them and doesn’t consider or acknowledge that there is a downside, should be promptly shown own the door.”

    We asked Michael if he believes comments can have a significant impact on your time on site metric, and/or that this metric carries significant weight in Google rankings.

    “Does Google take a look at factors like time on site and bounce rate? IMHO yes, but you should be looking to increase those with good information, and solid actionable content, not comments,” he says. “The biggest effect comments have is giving Google a date to show in the SERP’s. This is a huge factor who’s importance can’t be unstated. If I’m looking for how to fix the mouse on my computer, or what dress Angelina Jolie wore to an awards show, having the date show up in the SERP has a lot of value for the user. If I’m looking to learn how to structure a website, the date plays almost no role. The author’s expertise and understanding of information architecture trumps the date.”

    “While I’m not living in the SEO world of 1999, things like keyword focus and density do play a role,” he adds. “If you’re doing your job as an SEO in 95% of the cases the keyword you are trying to rank for should be the most used word/phrase on your page. If you’ve gone to all the trouble to do that why would you now let and knucklehead with a keyboard and internet connection come by and screw that up with comments?”

    We asked Schoemaker whether he thinks Google is beyond manipulation for most sites at this point. “No… and will never be,” he says. “Link selling companies like TLA are recording record profits. Link Wheels are popping up and giving great results.”

    “Here is the thing,” he says. “When you have a branded, quality site you can feel pretty safe in buying links to it, which is ironic because these people are the least likely to feel safe doing so. But as you have seen in the past even when sites get busted for grossly violating Google’s rules they are only out for a couple days.”

    “It makes Google look bad when users can’t find what they are looking for,” he adds. “Plain and simple.”

    “Everyday, people type in ShoeMoney in Google to get to my site,” he says. “If Google were to take me out then people would go to all these scraper sites that may or may not contain my content. This gives the user a bad experience and makes Google look incompetent.”

    “So again, build a good site that people enjoy using,” he says. “The rest will sort itself out.”

    “I just focus on building sites and services that people want to use,” he says. “They tend to rank well because people link to them.  I know it’s not a juicy quote but I have made a lot of money and ranked #1 for every competitive term I have gone for.  It’s not rocket science.”

    While there have been some interesting points made here about the value of comments, we’d still like your feedback. Your comments are welcome.

  • Demand Media Writers Offer Different Viewpoints of Assignment Reduction

    Demand Media Writers Offer Different Viewpoints of Assignment Reduction

    Demand Media recently alerted Demand Media Studios writers that it would be reducing the amount of assignments it would be given out. As discussed in a recent article, this has left a fair amount of writers without a significant source of income. While that article focused a bit more on Demand’s strategy as a business, we wanted to take a closer look at some perspectives from the writers.

    Many have expressed frustration. Some have gone so far as to accuse Demand Media of lying at worst or misleading at best. Others think such claims are way off base. In this article, we’ll take a look at these different points of view.

    What do you think? Share your thoughts in the comments. And if you find this subject interesting, please don’t hesitate to share it on Stumbleupon, Facebook, Twitter, +1, etc.

    A writer, who wishes to remain anonymous, tells WebProNews, “I’ve been writing for Demand Studios since 2009 and have only used the income for pocket money, however recently I intended to expand my writing with them. In May 2011 I qualified to write for eHow Money a specialized category for writers with professional experience and the appropriate credentials in addition to my current status as a general writer.”

    “I retired as an Assistant Vice President in 2008 from a corporate career in Financial Services in mutual funds from a major financial institution,” they added. “I was a licensed registered principal and have over 30 years experience in financial services and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Economics. My attention was to fulfill a lifelong goal to pursue a fulltime writing career post-retirement. I’ve had extensive business writing experience so I qualified very easily for the general writing and subsequently eHow Money based on my writing ability, business experience and education.”

    The writer tells us that they, along with may other Demand Studios writers received vague responses when expressing concern at the lack of assignments. They said they felt “they were being strung along, which is akin to lying.”

    “They continually developed new writing categories (eHow Money [and] eHow Garden are examples) as the titles disappeared and the promises that they were providing a better writing experience for their freelance writers,” the writer tells us. “Specifically, shortly after I qualified for eHow Money I contacted the editorial staff because the titles for this category were drastically reduced, and questioned them about qualifying me for a category when the titles were rapidly disappearing. Their response was that they were sorry but working on getting titles out. This is basically the standard response [to] all of their writers when the quantity of titles are questioned. It’s almost as if all of the changes for ‘new writing opportunities’ were a coverup when they were actually taking away the writing opportunities at the same time.”

    The writer says Demand Media raised the pay for eHow Money articles, but that there were “no articles to write”.

    “Many of the writers were optimistic and waited patiently,” the writer says. “Some writers also encouraged others that more titles would be available via our writers’ forum. There were a significant number of writers earning enough money to pay a good portion of their bills…Writers sincerely believed that they could depend on Demand Studios and continued to write for them because they are one of the few online organizations that pay upfront.”

    The writer says they expected this when Demand Media went public and the Panda Update came. “I instinctively knew this was going to be a disaster.”

    “It is also very important for the writing community to understand that Demand Studios had and still has writers who provide them with content of the highest professional quality,” the writer adds.

    “I’m done with them and will not devote my energy to a company any longer who has no respect for its writers,” the writer tells us. “They’re still making money tens of times over the amount they paid me and all of the other writers.”

    This is just the perspective from one writer, but we have seen plenty of other similar tales. Noah Davis at Business Insider shares a response to the freelancer backlash from Demand Media’s Chief Revenue Officer Joanne Bradford: “It’s still one of the largest pools of writing assignments available in the world. We don’t feel like it’s that dramatic of a change because it’s not like every assignment was being taken.”

    Our anonymous writer says the response is an “insult.” Davis says he heard from other writers that the quote was “hilarious to those of us who are still working for [Demand Studios].”

    Bradford is also quoted as saying, “The folks that are more generalists and have written the short-form how-to articles are finding less assignments. This goes hand-in-hand with our quality improvement and focus on using people who have expertise about the topics they write about.”

    Not all Demand Studios writers are so upset though. Some don’t feel that they’ve been misleading at all.

    Ken Crawford of The Freelancer Today, for example, has been writing for Demand since July of 2009, and says Demand was his “bread and butter” for quite some time. He acknowledges that things have changed, but he still writes for Demand on a regular basis, he says.

    “The perception of whether Demand lied to writers or not, depends on who you ask,” Crawford tells WebProNews. “To be honest, Demand never lied to anybody or made statements that promised one thing while delivering another. Many of the writers that are accusing Demand of lying are ones who are finding themselves without work. Many of these writers are ones who didn’t apply the guidelines, had high percentages of abandoned rewrites/rejections or were basically writing the thinnest content just to grab the $15 justifying it with ‘you get what you pay for.’ Granted $15 is not a lot for content, but if the writer agrees to the rate of pay they should still put out quality work. Nothing is hidden.”

    “Demand has not hidden the fact that changes were coming,” he adds. “Even in the latest announcement, the people claiming lies only scanned the information instead of actually reading it. Ehow is not going away, but there will be less title availability. Face it there are only so many ways you can write ‘How To Boil an Egg’ before you finally have to move on to ‘How To Peel a Boiled Egg.’”

    eHow has been talking about its content clean-up initiative for a good portion of the year. This includes the deletion of at least 300,000 articles and a feedback feature that tells the company when users are unsatisfied with content, so it can then be more heavily scrutinized and either deleted or edited as necessary.

    “While Demand hasn’t come out and spelled out specifically what they are doing in detail, they haven’t outright lied to anybody,” says Crawford. “People make assumptions on limited knowledge. People make accusations out of fear and anger.”

    “The work is still there,” he adds. “I, like many other writers, manage to keep my queue filled daily and write consistently. Sure there are issues with editing consistency and so forth, but the work is there for those that work within the system.”

    In our previous article, we mentioned the potential financial impact on Demand Media. Is it possible that less assignments means less growth?

    “My gut feeling is that this is a good move for Demand,” says Crawford. “It will ‘weed’ out writers who are simply there to put words on a screen for a quick buck. Demand is making efforts to match both writers and editors in their fields of expertise. It’s a growing process and one that is not without it’s challenges. But looking at it long-term, I believe it will benefit not only Demand Studios and it’s writers but also the reader. Less articles at the moment generated for eHow will bring better quality and, one would hope, more value to the reader.”

    “Demand Studios is accountable to the shareholders and not just themselves,” he adds. “While the ‘creative’ plan to show profit over 5 years on content is nice, it is vital that they show profit now. It’s business. They will concentrate in areas that give more of a return on investment. Ehow is still a big part of that process, and as far as I can see it will continue to be a big part.”

    Crawford also wanted to make one last point about his own position.

    “People tend to think I’m a cheerleader or somehow stir the vat of the DMS Kool-Aid,” he says. “My only affiliation with Demand is that of a service provider, plain and simple. The fact is, Demand fills a void for writers. Unfortunately the way the system was set-up in the past, it also provided income for those who simply wanted to make a quick buck. Regardless if you agree to write for $15 or $100, the end result of a writer’s work should be the same. It’s about quality. It’s about bringing value to your client and the readers. If $15 is beneath you, don’t write for Demand Studios.”

    A lot of writers apparently don’t feel like they have much of a choice.

    Jennifer Mattern at AllFreelanceWriting.com writes, “I’ve also seen writers’ responses to this news. On one hand it’s difficult for me to have sympathy when we’ve spent so much time and energy here helping writers improve their freelance businesses. The information is out there — not only here, but from many great freelancers such as Lori Widmer, Anne Wayman, and Peter Bowerman, and the folks at Freelance Zone, Freelance Folder, and Freelance Switch. If you want to be a more successful freelance writer, you have seemingly endless information available to help you do that.”

    “On the other hand, I can’t help but sympathize with some of these writers,” she says. “The news came somewhat suddenly and not long before the holidays. While it’s true no one should have been relying too heavily on any single client, content mill or not, I know they’ll have a tough road ahead as their own business models are forced into a period of transition.”

    It’s not a simple situation. There are other opportunities out there for freelance writers though, and it’s clear that quality is a highly sought after quality to have. I suggest continue improving your skills and writing about what you know about. Prove to your prospective clients that they would be better off with your content.

    Content can still goes a long way on the web.

    What is your position on this discussion? Share your thoughts in the comments.

  • Google Buzz Gets Killed, Along with Code Search, Jaiku, iGoogle Social Features

    When Google launched Google+, it didn’t take long for some of us to speculate about the demise of Google Buzz. Now, we don’t have to speculate much more because Google has come out and said they’re shutting it down, along with a few other services.

    “In a few weeks we’ll shut down Google Buzz and the Buzz API, and focus instead on Google+,” says Google VP, Product Bradley Horowtiz in a blog post. “While people obviously won’t be able to create new posts after that, they will be able to view their existing content on their Google Profile, and download it using Google Takeout.”

    “Changing the world takes focus on the future, and honesty about the past,” he says. “We learned a lot from products like Buzz, and are putting that learning to work every day in our vision for products like Google+. Our users expect great things from us; today’s announcements let us focus even more on giving them something truly awesome.”

    The other services Google is shutting down include: Code Search, Jaiku, iGoogle’s social features and the University Research Program for Google Search. These will all be shut down on January 15.

    iGoogle itself, and non-social iGoogle apps will stay the same.

    Google is also officially closing the Google Labs site today, as previously announced. Boutiques.com and Like.com will be replaced by Google Product Search, also as previously announced.

    Will you miss any of the products Google is shutting down? Let us know in the comments.

  • Bitly’s Take On Social Search

    Bitly’s Take On Social Search

    Social search is an interesting animal, mostly because there are so many different approaches. There’s realtime search, like we’ve seen from Google+ and Topsy in the last week. There’s Google’s social search, which simply sprinkles social results throughout its web search results. There’s the Wajam/Greplin approach, where you give the services access to your account so you can search through your social networks for relevant results.

    Popular URL shortening service bitly has announced its version of social search, and it’s more about searching through popular content.

    “bitly shortens 80 million URLs every day, give or take a few,” the company says. “Now, with our new search technology, we’re crawling and classifying every URL we shorten to create an index of the most ‘viral’ content on the web — content that’s broadly distributed, frequently-clicked, and trending at a high velocity.”

    Bitly shares an example of a search for “onstar” comparing it to a Google search.

    Onstar on bitly

    Bitly points out that there’s been some controversy surrounding OnStar tracking its customers, and that the top results here show news stories about the company and a blog post from a person talking about it, and that a Google search returns the company’s official site and its Wikipedia page – “results based on Google’s pagerank algorithm, which prioritizes the pages which are linked to by the most authoritative sites on the web.”

    To be fair, when I searched Google for “onstar” the first two results are as bitly says, but the next one was an Engadget article about tracking. There are also several other first page results on the tracking topic, and the company’s Facebook and Twitter accounts, which in all honesty may be among the results a person wants if they just search for the “onstar” query.

    “This is the challenge of the realtime search space — many of the pages are so new, so fresh, that they don’t have any pagerank,” says bitly. “A personal blog post isn’t authoritative in the way that the New York Times or Wired magazine is authoritative, but stories don’t find their way into Wired unless people like Jonathan Zdiarski [used in bitly’s example] speak out. Increasingly, they do, and often they reach a broad audience on social media before more conventionally-authoritative newsgatherers amplify their messages. ”

    There’s certainly a case for realtime search. No question. I thought Google did a fairly good job of it when they had it, but then they lost the Twitter firehose, and the feature went away. Sooner or later, Google is expected to bring it back, with data from Google+ and other sources. Google did launch realtime search in Google+ this week. Perhaps that is coming closer to fruition.

    Rather than using a pagerank-type signal, bitly displays stories that it predicts will get the most attention over the next 24 hours. Then it uses its own analytics to refine the predictions in realtime. “Our search technology is based on the the most valuable measure of engagement: the click,” bitly says.

    Bitly has even built a reputation monitoring service around this technology, with an alert system. It’s designed to warn you about “swings in volume and sentiment related to specific keywords” in realtime, as opposed to just showing you what’s already been said about you or your brand. There’s also a dashboard (pictured at the top of the article) where you can view keywords you’re tracking. This feature rolls out to beta testers and bitly Enterprise users over the next couple weeks.

  • Google No Longer Waiting For You To Update Your Business Listing

    Google No Longer Waiting For You To Update Your Business Listing

    Google announced that it is now updating business listings on Google Places for businesses, rather than waiting for businesses to do it. That’s not to say that you can’t update it yourself, but Google basically says it will do so for businesses who don’t count this as a priority.

    Google may get data from users who provide it, or if their own system acquires data by other means. Luckily, Google will send business owners email notifications when their listings are updated.

    Here are the exact words from the announcement:

    And while some business owners may have previously verified their organic listing to ensure that their company information was correct at that particular moment in time, we recognize that amidst all the work that goes into running a successful enterprise, remembering to update their Google Places account may not always be top of mind. Oftentimes, a neighborhood local or a loyal customer is eager to help their favorite business update its online presence when it moves into a bigger space across the street, or extends its hours for the summer season.

    That’s why today, we’re introducing a new process that helps streamline the way updates are made to potentially outdated or incorrect business listings. Previously, verified business listings would always reflect the information provided by its owner – even if we received data about an updated name, address, or hours of operation. But now, if a user provides new information about a business they know — or if our system identifies information from another source on the web that may be more recent than the data the business owner provided via Google Places — the organic listing will automatically be updated and the business owner will be sent an email notification about the change. Without requiring any effort on the part of the business owner, we’ll take measures to keep their listing up-to-date if our system determines that the edit is accurate. Of course, if the business owner disagrees or has even more recent information, they can always directly log in to their Google Places account and make further edits.

    Not that it’s every really stopped, but Google seems particularly focused on the local/maps side of things at the moment. Google Maps were even brought up in the company’s Q3 earnings call yesterday.

    “I am super pleased with Google Maps–it’s a favorite with our users, especially on mobile devices,” CEO Larry Page said on the call. “In August we launched in 40 new countries–taking our total to 130 countries.”

    He also mentioned the “baking” of identity into all of Google’s products (via Google+). “The new visual redesign–beautiful, consistent UIs for search, news, maps, translate and lots of other features,” he said. “It’s only the beginning of that process!” It’s going to be quite interesting to see where that goes.

    One can only assume that when Google finally rolls out business profiles for Google+ that they’ll be heavily integrated with Google Places business listings.

    Google notes that the new changes to the business listing updating will not affect online ads from business owners using AdWords, and that ads will continue to display the business info the owner has provided. I can’t imagine the backlash they would face if that wasn’t the case.

  • DuckDuckGo Ready to Go to the Next Level, Gets New Funding

    DuckDuckGo just announced that Union Square Ventues is leading the company’s first round of funding. Other investors include:  Scott Banister, Jim Young, Jeff Miller, Joshua Schachter, Kal Vapuri, Joshua Stylman and Peter Hershberg.

    In a Union Square Ventures blog post, Brad Burnham writes:

    When I first got into the venture capital business in the early 90s, it seemed to me that half of the deals I brought to the partnership were dismissed with the line “sure it’s cool but what the heck do they do if Microsoft decides to enter this business.” Today the role of the dominant player is played by Google (and increasingly Facebook). So as an investor, one has to consider how a potential portfolio company can thrive in the shadow of Google. No where is this more true than in Search.

    So, as you can imagine, we had a lot of interesting conversations in the process of evaluating our latest investment in Gabriel Weinberg’s alternative search engine,DuckDuckGo. Our confidence in Gabriel and DuckDuckGo is informed by having watched the decline of Microsoft’s hegemony in the 90’s. Two things happened that fundamentally changed the game: a shift in venue and a shift in business model. The venue moved from the desktop to the web and the business model shifted from packaged software to open source. It turned out that the way to compete with Microsoft was to not to compete, at least not directly. The way to compete with Microsoft was to change the basis of competition. We invested in DuckDuckGo because we became convinced that it was not only possible to change the basis of competition in search, it was time to do it.

    It seems as though Union Square sees something in DuckDuckGo that reminds them of when Google entered the scene. “The company is young and under staffed so there are definitely holes Gabriel hopes to fill, but his observation that “traditional algorithmic signals are not the only authority on the web,” and his clever use of real authorities to curate search results makes Duck Duck Go an interesting alternative to your everyday brand,” Burnham says.

    Here’s an interview we did with Weinberg earlier this year, where he makes the case for DuckDuckGo (vs. Google):

    In a post on his own blog, Weinberg says:

    So why now? At the end of last year I noticed that the search engine started to really click with a greater percentage of people in a way that it hadn’t before. Don’t get me wrong — we still have a long way to go to reachour vision — but it was obvious that some things were really starting to become compelling, e.g. our Zero-click Info, privacy policy and goodies. 

    As these things have started to click, the list of obvious ways to fruitfully extend DuckDuckGo has grown rapidly (e.g. more sources, vertical goodies, etc.). In fact, the list has far outstripped our capacity to build them in reasonable time given current resources.

    We’ve been trying to address this issue from a number of angles. We leverage external APIs as heavily as possible. We’ve been slowly open sourcing things and recruiting developers to help us integrate data and goodies. (If this piques your interest, start here!) 

    He notes that the company has already begun building its team, and expects to be able to build on that significantly with the new funding.

    The amount of the funding is unclear.

  • Google+ Gets Real-Time Search, Improved Hashtag Support

    It seems like just yesterday when we were talking about how Topsy was doing Google+ search better than Google, as the company announced realtime (and other) Google+ search results. As a matter of fact, it was yesterday.

    Now, Google has announced real-time search for Google+. How about that?

    “Now when you search in Google+, you’ll see a message about new posts the instant they’re available,” SVP, Engineering Vic Gundotra says in a Google+ update. “If you click on this message, or select ‘Most recent’, then relevant posts will start appearing in real-time.”

    Now, I wonder when we’ll see this come back to Google search.

    Google+ also now has improved hashtag support. “People have long used hashtags to mark their posts with certain topics — just ask our very own +Chris Messina, hashtag inventor. You don’t have to use hashtags on Google+ (search works fine without them), but when you do, we’ll automatically link to search results.”

    Based on the feedback on Gundotra’s post, users are pretty fired up about the hashtags.

    Google said it would bring realtime search back to Google search (it went away after Google lost Twitter firehose access) with data from Google+ and other sources, but that’s not part of today’s announcement. Perhaps, they’re letting the user base grow more first.

  • Tips for Diagnosing A Drop In Google Rankings, From Matt Cutts

    Google has posted a new Webmaster Help video. As usual, Head of Web Spam Matt Cutts has answered a user-submitted question. The question is:

    “When you notice a drastic drop in your rankings and traffic from Google, what process would you take for diagnosing the issue?”

    “One thing I would do very early on, is I would do ‘site:mydomain.com’ and figure out are you completely not showing up in Google or do parts of your site show up in Google?” he begins. “That’s also a really good way to find out whether you are partially indexed. Or if you don’t see a snippet, then maybe you had a robots.txt that blocked us from crawling. So we might see a reference to that page, and we might return something that we were able to see when we saw a link to that page, but we weren’t able to see the page itself or weren’t able to fetch it.”

    “You might also notice in the search results if we think that you’re hacked or have malware, then we might have a warning there,” he adds. “And that could, of course, lead to a drop in traffic if people see that and decide not to go to the hacked site or the site that has malware.”

    Then it’s on to Webmaster Tools.

    “The next place I’d look is the webmaster console,” says Cutts. “Google.com/webmasters prove that you control or own the site in a variety of ways. And we’re doing even more messages than we used to do. Not just things like hidden text, park domains, doorway pages. Actively quite a few different types of messages that we’re publishing now, and when we think there’s been a violation of our quality guidelines. If you don’t see any particular issue or message listed there, then you might consider going to the Webmaster Forum.”

    “As part of that, you might end up asking yourself, is this affecting just my site or a lot of other people? If it’s just your site, then it might be that we thought that your site violated our guidelines, or of course, it could be a server-related issue or an issue on your site, of course, on your side,” he says. “But it could also be an algorithmic change. And so if a bunch of people are all seeing a particular change, then it might be more likely to be something due to an algorithm.”

    We’ve certainly seen plenty of that lately, and will likely see more tweaks to Panda for the time being, based on this recent tweet from Cutts:

    Weather report: expect some Panda-related flux in the next few weeks, but will have less impact than previous updates (~2%). 7 days ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    “You can also check other search engines, because if other search engines aren’t listing you, that’s a pretty good way to say, well, maybe the problem is on my side. So maybe I’ve deployed some test server, and maybe it had a robots.txt or a noindex so that people wouldn’t see the test server, and then you pushed it live and forgot to remove the noindex,” Cutts continues in the video. “You can also do Fetch as Googlebot. That’s another method. That’s also in our Google Webmaster console. And what that lets you do is send out Googlebot and actually retrieve a page and show you what it fetched. And sometimes you’ll be surprised. It could be hacked or things along those lines, or people could have added a noindex tag, or a rel=canonical that pointed to a hacker’s page.”

    “We’ve also seen a few people who, for whatever reason, were cloaking, and did it wrong, and shot themselves in the foot,” he notes. “And so they were trying to cloak, and instead they returned normal content to users and completely empty content to Googlebot.”

    “Certainly if you’ve changed your site, your hosting, if you’ve revamped your design, a lot of that can also cause things,” he says. “So you want to look at if there’s any major thing you’ve changed on your side, whether it be a DNS, host name, anything along those lines around the same time. That can definitely account for things. If you deployed something that’s really sophisticated AJAX, maybe the search engines are[n’t] quite able to crawl that and figure things out.

    Cutts, of course advises filling out a reconsideration request, once you think you’ve figured the issue.

  • FairSearch Releases 44-Page Paper About Google’s “Anticompetitive Conduct”

    The FairSearch Coalition has sent a 44-pager paper, entitled, “Google’s Transformation From Gateway To Gatekeeper: How Google’s Exclusionary And Anticompetitive Conduct Restricts Innovation And Deceives Consumers,” to all 50 U.S. Attorneys General.

    “The paper offers in the greatest detail yet the coalition’s concerns that Google’s business practices that threaten competition and the free markets, deceive consumers, and threaten further innovation and economic growth and new jobs from the technology sector,” a representative for the coalition tells WebProNews.

    “The Attorneys General play an important role in the ongoing antitrust investigations of Google’s business, with Texas, California, Ohio and New York having opened full-scale investigations, and reports that Mississippi and Oklahoma are considering following suit,” he adds.

    The U.S. Federal Trade Commission, Korean Fair Trade Commission, and European Commission also have open investigations of Google’s business.

    A letter from Patrick Lynch, who is an advisor to FairSearch, and former president of the National Association of Attorneys General (and former AG of Rhode Island), introduces the paper. Here’s the full text of that letter:

    Letter from Patrick Lynch to Attorneys General
     
    In the last year, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission launched an antitrust investigation into serious allegations that Google is engaging in a pattern of business practices that deceive consumers and stifle competition and innovation in the Internet ecosystem, and it has been reported that the Attorneys General of Texas, California, Ohio, and New York are participating in the investigation as well. Additionally, the U.S. Department of Justice recently issued rare “second requests” for more information in its antitrust reviews of Google’s proposed acquisitions of AdMeld and Motorola Mobility.  The DOJ also recently settled a criminal investigation of what it called the “unsafe, unlawful, importation of prescription drugs by Canadian on-line pharmacies, with Google’s knowledge and assistance, into the United States, directly to U.S. consumers,” resulting in an unprecedented $500 million forfeiture by Google.  And on September 21st, a bipartisan panel of the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Antitrust, Competition Policy, and Consumer Rights held a hearing entitled “The Power of Google: Serving Consumers or Threatening Competition?” led by Chairman Herb Kohl (D-WI) and Ranking Member Mike Lee (R-UT).
     
    In other words, evidence is mounting that Google’s business practices deserve further investigation from law enforcement and antitrust officials and that the time to act to protect competition, innovation, and consumers is now.
     
    I have briefed many of you personally, and many of you were present for the panels earlier this year at the NAAG and CWAG meetings which examined these issues.  In light of the high degree of interest from you and your colleagues, I have asked FairSearch.org, the coalition of Internet companies I represent, to prepare the attached white paper that lays out Google’s anticompetitive acts in great detail.  There are five specific areas of concern dealt with in this white paper:
     
    –          Deceptive display: Steering users toward its own products by displaying them at the top or in the middle of the results page in ways that suggest to consumers that they are natural search results, rather than links to Google sites in which Google has a direct economic interest.
     
    –          Search manipulation: Manipulating its search algorithm to exclude or penalize competing sites, effectively “disappearing” them from the Internet.
     
    –          Unauthorized content scraping: Stealing content developed by other websites, such as user reviews, without permission and displaying that content on its own pages, sometimes even without attribution.
     
    –          Unfair treatment of advertisers: Manipulating advertisers’ quality scores to inflate ad prices and placing restrictions on its “must buy” ad platform that inhibit customers from using competing platforms.
     
    –          Exclusionary conduct in mobile: Buying up companies in the mobile search area that present a nascent competitive threat, and imposing exclusivity restrictions in its Android licensing agreements to maintain and expand its dominance.
     
    I believe that if you look at the evidence presented, you will come to the same conclusion that your colleagues and the federal competition authorities have.  The time to simply take Google at face value when it says “trust us” is long past.  State Attorneys General have a critical role to play in investigating Google’s conduct to prevent further harm to competition and consumers, and many of you are already deeply involved.  I encourage each of you to examine the attached white paper closely, speak with your colleagues who are actively investigating Google’s conduct, and consider standing with them in protecting consumers and competitive markets by opening your own investigation.
     
    As always, I am available to speak with you further or to arrange a briefing from FairSearch.org if you or your staff have any questions. 
     
    Please contact me with any questions.
     
    Sincerely,

    Patrick C. Lynch
    Former Attorney General of Rhode Island
    One Park Row, 5th Flr.
    Providence, RI 02903

    The lengthy paper can be found here in PDF format.

  • Google Panda Update, Angry Birds, & How People Share

    In today’s infographic, we look at some offerings rom Custard Media, Aytm, and Clearspring on the effects of the Google Panda update on SEO, addiction to Angry Birds and how people share content on social media, respectively.

    View other daily infographic collections here.

    Custard Media looks at the Panda update:

    Panda Effects on SEO  

    Aytm looks at Angry Birds addiction:

    Angry Birds info  

    Clearspring shares some AddThis data about sharing:

    how people share  

  • Demand Media Shifts from “Content Farm” Approach, Writers Lose Income Source

    Demand Media Shifts from “Content Farm” Approach, Writers Lose Income Source

    Demand Media, with its site eHow, has essentially been the poster child for the term “content farm” – something the company has done much to distance itself from. CEO Richard Rosenblatt has said flat out that he doesn’t consider what the company does to be a “content farm”. Fair enough, but plenty disagreed.

    Do you think Demand Media is moving in the right direction? Let us know in the comments.

    Eventually, Google’s Panda update, sometimes referred to as the “farmer” update caught up with eHow, but the damage wasn’t as bad as one could have imagined. However, as we told you about earlier this year, the company did begin a large effort to boost eHow’s reputation and content quality. This included new feedback tools for readers, partnerships for niche content, and the deletion/further editing of a lot of articles.

    During Demand Media’s last earnings call, it said that it had already removed 300,000 articles. After a recent iteration of Google’s Panda update, we reached out to the company for comment, and VP, Corporate Communications Kristen Moore told us, “I can tell you that we’ve been really pleased with the pace and the results of the new initiatives we announced and implemented in the spring to ensure tighter controls around quality on eHow and across our studio model. We’ll be providing a more specific update on those initiatives and what our sites have seen relative to the Panda updates when we announce Q3 earnings in just a few weeks.”

    Since then, Demand Media Studios has sent out the following email to writers and editors (hat tip to Noah Davis):

    Dear Writers and Editors,
     
    We realize there has been recent concern around assignment availability. We know many of you rely on Demand Media Studios as a regular income source and as a way to grow your careers. For those reasons and others, we want to be as transparent as we can about the future.
     
    In just a few years, we’ve worked together to grow the eHow.com library to an astounding 3 million articles. While eHow has been the main publisher of content produced by DMS writers, we’ve also developed other writing outlets on our own properties like typeF.com and LIVESTRONG.COM as well as through partnerships like Chron.com and USAToday. With our eHow.com library already so comprehensive, we saw the opportunity to shift our focus to more targeted categories and other forms of content such as slide shows, video series and feature articles. Good examples of these new formats can be found on  eHow and LIVESTRONG.COM.
     
    None of this would have been possible without having spent so many years working with you, our writers and editors, to build our comprehensive library.
     
    Looking ahead, as we continue to publish articles for eHow and our other sites, we want to be sure we are building on what already exists, not replicating it. This is not to say we will stop assigning standard titles in How to and Topic View format for eHow.com. But it does mean that we will have fewer eHow.com assignments for the foreseeable future.
     
    However, we will continue to add more publishers and sections as we’ve done over the years, and ultimately the work and opportunities will grow for our best writers and editors. We are also excited to completely execute on our vision of having the most qualified writers and editors working on titles within their areas of expertise.
     
    In order for this to happen, we need to make sure of a few things:

    • That only executable, valid and unique titles make it to your Work Desk.
    • That every article is written and copy edited by a qualified professional with background, knowledge or experience in the topic.
    • That every article has the appropriate format and word count for the topic to be comprehensively covered.

    We will also be putting additional focus on helping you grow within your fields. This means offering ways for you to gain exposure on our sites and new tools for you to promote yourself and your work. We will send additional updates and information on assignments going forward. We will also set up some new avenues for you to ask questions and offer feedback. For the time being, if you have any additional questions, please use this forum thread.
     
    Best Regards,
    Demand Media Studios Team

    This, along with the aforementioned eHow content clean-up initiative, seems to signal a drastically different content strategy than what Demand Media has come to be known for – the “content farm” (or call it what you like) strategy. That’s a strategy, mind you, was generally about writing assignments based on what people are searching for, and including numerous articles on the same topics, covering a variety of different title options. The strategy worked for Google search visibility. No question about it. At least it did for a while. That doesn’t mean that they’re not assigning content based on “demand,” but it seems to be less about saturating the web with run of the mill content.

    The company has also talked a lot this year about the increasing diversity in its traffic sources, and its earnings reports have indicated the company is not completely reliant on Google.

    We reached out for further comment on the company’s evolving strategy, but they’d not comment on my specific questions. They did say, however, that they’ll be sharing more details in the weeks to come around the new tools they’ll be using to help promote writers, as mentioned in the email.

    We’ll certainly be covering the Q3 report when it comes. It’s going to be interesting to hear more about the company’s post Panda content strategy. It may even provide some insight into how others impacted by the update may be able to recover.

    Another angle to this whole thing is that a lot of people just lost a source of income, and from the sound of it some of them are taking it pretty hard. In this economy, that’s not hard to believe. In the comments of this article, for example, Vicky Hunter writes:

    There were no articles available in the main eHow pool today for the first time ever. All but a few other specialty channels have been empty, as well. Demand’s thousands or writers are panicking on their forums. Crying, screaming, blaming, begging, fighting, pleading for help from fellow writers – even hinting at suicide. No matter what you think about them, you can’t help but feel some real pain for some of these writers. And Demand still won’t be honest about what’s going on, or when things will stabilize. Some of the jumpers are still hanging on at the site, waiting for things to get better, which, at best, means some few articles for some few lucky writers to grab each day.

    The bottom must have dropped out, in terms of revenue, for this to happen. I assume the next earnings report will show this. The stock will really tank after that. I feel bad for the writers. Some were making $4,000+ a month, and many were able to keep families afloat during this bad economy – and now it’s all gone, like that – poof.

    One major factor about cutting off these writing assignments is the potential loss of the growth curve, which could come back to haunt the company.

    That said, in the last report, the company reported a 32% increase in revenue, with 76% growth in cash from operations. You have to remember that the Demand Media Studios isn’t Demand Media’s only source of revenue. Rosenblatt cited not only the company’s content and media business, but its registrar business as providing significant year-over-year growth. ““We plan to build on this momentum by expanding our brand advertising relationships and accelerating our content platform’s international and social media growth initiatives,” he said.

    I guess we’ll find out more about those initiatives during the next call.

    There are a lot of questions surrounding Demand’s shift in strategy. Has Demand Media taken too drastic an approach to improve quality? Are writers getting the short end of the stick? Is this going to hurt Demand Media in in the long run? Or is this what’s best for the company, and ultimately for search engine results?

    We want to know what you think. Let us know in the comments.

  • Bing Shows Off New Windows Phone Search Features

    Bing is talking about some new features it has for Windows Phone 7.5 (Mango). This includes voice search, Shazam-like music search, and Google Goggles-like “Bing Vision”.

    Voice search is pretty self-explanatory. Music search lets you find whatever song is playing by “letting your phone ‘listen’ to the music. It will then show you the name, artist and album, as well as where to hear or buy it.

    The Bing Vision feature is essentially Bing’s answer to Google Goggles, which lets you search by taking a picture with your phone. “You can now use your phone’s camera to look up product information by bringing an object into view,” the Bing Team explains. “Bing will recognize text and present the option to select words for a search, and instantly return product results if the object has a barcode. Bing Vision can also detect product information from UPC codes, QR Codes and MS Tag as well as cover art for books, CD’s, DVD’s and video games.”

    There is also a new “local scout” feature, which provides local search results, recommends restaurants /businesses nearby, etc. The results are arranged by highlights, eat/drink, see/do, and shopping (nearby stores).

    Finally, there is a feature called “app connect,” which lets Bing search results return Windows PHone Marketplace app results when relevant. This is detailed more in the following video:

    <a href='http://video.msn.com/?mkt=en-us&#038;vid=4b36edb3-28b8-4d90-8cc9-f6965bf65df0&#038;src=SLPl:embed::uuids' target='_new' title='Windows Phone 7.5: Bing(o) on Mango'>Video: Windows Phone 7.5: Bing(o) on Mango</a>