May 19, 2013

Google’s Search Results Don’t Paint an Accurate Picture

Google’s Search Results Don’t Paint an Accurate Picture

Google’s Search Results Don’t Paint an Accurate Picture

You can’t trust your Google search results. They’re biased, and they don’t reflect the true reality of what everyone else sees.

“But Google’s, well, Google! It’s the biggest search engine in all the world! What do you mean, we can’t trust it?”

You can’t trust Google’s results, because it’s trying to be so helpful and useful to you.

Let’s say you need to find someone to build a deck for your house. You go to Google, and do a search for “deck builder.” The results that pop up will be all kinds of deck builders within a 10 – 20 mile radius of where you happen to be sitting at that moment. That’s because Google can tell where you are. And if you’re logged in to your Gmail or YouTube account at the same time, Google even knows who you’re connected to.

Google search for Deck Builder in north Indianapolis IN 1024x503 Googles Search Results Dont Paint an Accurate Picture

That means the results you see are based on your location and who Google thinks you’ll want to talk to. It will even show you a little map of all the deck builders in relation to where you’re sitting.

This is a useful little feature that Google has, because they figure you want to see the deck builders who are closest to you, and not the ones who have the best optimized website but are 1,000 miles away.

Want to See the Real Results?

But what if you want to get a more accurate picture about what Google “really” ranks as #1? Maybe you’re doing a national search for some company or manufacturer, and you’re not as concerned about whether they’re 10 miles away.

For this, you would do an anonymous search, where Google doesn’t know it’s you. On your web browser, open an Incognito or Private browsing session (look in the File menu). That turns off all cookies and identifiers so Google and every other website doesn’t know who you are and won’t track you. Now do the same search.

You should see some different results. In fact, depending on your search terms and your location, you’ll see some wildly different results.

That’s because Google doesn’t know a thing about you. They’re showing results that anyone who’s not signed in to Google would see. They’re as close to objective, unbiased results as you’re going to get. But even then, Google is trying to figure out where you are, so it can try to give you the results you would most likely want.

Do that deck builder search in an Incognito search, and chances are, you’ll still see the local results, but the rankings will be different. Some pages will drop and other pages will appear, but they may still be locally-focused.

Take that one step further: Do the same search while you’re sitting in a hotel room on a business trip, and Google won’t show you deck builders in your area. They’ll show you deck builders within 20 miles of your hotel room. (Google knows where you are, based on your IP address, which it can pinpoint to your physical location.)

Again, that’s because Google wants to be as helpful as possible. They want to show you the results closest to you, and the results all your Google+ friends have shared or created themselves.

Why This Is Bad for Businesses

This creates a serious problem for businesses who do this to check their Google search rank. The first thing an eager marketer will do is search for their best keywords to see where their own website ranks.

And, because Google is so helpful and kind, it figures, “A-ha, Shelly wants to see her website. Let’s show it to her!” and places her little website at the top of the search results page, where it outranks giant mega-companies who have been doing this for years.

“WE WON GOOGLE!” Shelly hollers at the top of her lungs, running around the office, high-fiving everyone.

Then, because she’s eager to show her husband how awesome she and her web team have been, she makes the 30 mile commute home, pops open his laptop, and does the same search only to find that in a few short hours, her company website has dropped from 1st to 87th.

It only gets worse when she goes back to work, checks again, and sees she’s winning Google once more.

You’re Not Really First

This is a problem for anyone who relies on Google search results to see how their search engine optimization and website design are performing. They get lulled into a false sense of security by Google’s personalized results, and slack off their SEO. And without realizing it, they slip lower and lower in the real, objective results, disappearing from everyone’s view except for their own.

If you want to get a real idea of how well you’re doing, you need a Google rank checker like WebCEO, which will check the actual rankings and tell you where you reallyrank for your chosen keywords.

This is true whether you’re doing the searches for your company, or even your own name (very handy for a job search, because it tells you what the recruiters and hiring managers will see).

In its efforts to be as helpful as possible, Google has inadvertently tricked us and lulled us into a false sense of success, which creates problems for us that we’re not even aware of.

But rather than rest on your laurels, you need to keep track of how things are really going for you. Use a rank checking website like WebCEO, and run a report at least once a month. Then, focus on new SEO techniques — a regular blog, social media promotion, submitting blog posts to Google+ — that can help move you up in the actual rankings.

Ultimately, you may end up getting your personalized search and actual search rankings to match up.

Professional Blog Service - Number one business blogging agency

It’s Not Dead, It’s Pining for the Fjords: The State of SEO Today

It’s Not Dead, It’s Pining for the Fjords: The State of SEO Today

SEO pros all had to stop on a dime and pivot after Google’s algorithm updates, abandoning all the old SEO tactics, and refocus on new, acceptable practices instead.

They may have acted too hastily.

We heard from a partner recently that a joint client we used to work with is seeing a decrease in their search rankings after we stopped doing the “old-school” SEO tactics for them (since when did 2010 become old school?!).

Their Google rankings have dropped because the posts didn’t properly use keywords in the headline and body copy.Dead parrot 300x168 Its Not Dead, Its Pining for the Fjords: The State of SEO Today

We weren’t doing anything special. No keyword stuffing, no black hat trickery, nothing. We had been using keywords the way we were supposed to all along — mention them once in the headline, a few times in the body copy, once in the tags — but once we stopped doing it, everything headed south.

What this tells us is that old-school SEO is not actually dead. It’s just different.

It’s pining for the fjords.

Google still needs us to tell them what our blog posts are about. It operates just like a library’s catalog service: if the library doesn’t tell the database what a book is called, who wrote it, or what the subject matter is, you’ll never find it in the library.

Imagine walking into a library filled with books without covers and title pages. You have no idea what the books are about, there’s no rhyme or reason to the organization, and the only way you can know what’s what is if a friend tells you where to find the book you want.

That’s Google without basic SEO practices. All you’re doing by following on page SEO is slapping a cover on the book, telling the library who wrote it and what it’s called, and letting them organize it the way they see fit.

Now, compare that to the millions of web pages that never followed the SEO basics, or worse, the companies that no longer follow the SEO basics. If you continue to use the SEO basics, you’re going to outperform these other pages just by taking 30 seconds and filling out three fields on your copy of WordPress SEO by Yoast

So, while a lot of so-called SEO “pros” like to jump on the “SEO is so OVER!” bandwagon and look down their noses at traditional SEO practices as useless, don’t be so quick to abandon them. We’re seeing evidence with several of our clients that these are still helping Google understand what their pages are about.

The tactics aren’t boosting search rankings, and you can’t rank higher because you use SEO “better.” But old-school SEO is still serving a very utilitarian purpose. Don’t give them up just yet.

Professional Blog Service - Number one business blogging agency

B2B Social Media needs Blog Writing

Infographic on how Social Media are being used...

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B2B Social Media needs Blog Writing

If you are trying to run a  B2B social media campaign, it requires a good dose of blog writing. Content is king on Google. If you are not providing customers, prospects or colleagues with some authority in your market, you could get lost.  The center of any good campaign is the blog writing that goes with it. Any successful B2B social media campaign depends on it. Let’s take a look at what you need to consider:

Look at any Search Engine Optimization (SEO) course or checklist… you’ll find content freshness to be a key line item.

Read almost any social media plan… you’ll see that you have to have content to feed that huge network of friends, contacts and buddies you are creating.

Brush up on a few blogging how-to’s… you’ll find it’s all about content.

So, if content is so important, why do business people invest so little time in creating it?

Since starting Professional Blog Service, I’ve learned a little bit about why business people struggle with content:

Writing just isn’t urgent enough. Most business people are stuck in a reactive mode (much to Stephen Covey’s chagrin) where they deal with the most urgent task right now. Writing content is important, but it isn’t urgent.

Business people look at writing as something anyone can do well. My friends in the copywriting, legal and journalism professions know this isn’t so. Good writing isn’t easy to find. It takes time. And usually the person who has the time isn’t the one that can write the article.

typingContent creation isn’t fun. It’s fun to create campaigns, videos, and diagrams but writing content just is not most people’s idea of fun. It’s homework. It’s not sexy. But now more than ever it is critical to your marketing’s success.

Paul is the President of Professional Blog Service. PBS works with clients making strategic investments into business blogging, social media and search engine optimization.

 

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Your social media campaign needs business blogging as its hub

chickenegg

Facebook is the social media network of choice today. Everyone wants to get into Facebook and hand over the keys to them. If Facebook one day made everyone angry and the new kid shows up, what happens to all the content you shared? This is why we usually recommend having a business blog.

Social media networks come and go, but your business blog is forever.”

One question that gets asked a lot by new clients is “Should we start with a blog or should I start with building social media profiles?”

Some social media experts say this is a bad idea because a blog is worthless without a network to read it. They argue you’ll get more eyes by guest blogging on a bigger website. They’ll say that you need to develop relationships with “influentials” or “A-List” bloggers.

And they are right…

I do agree you need to work on building a social media network. I do agree you should guest blog. I can’t agree more that it takes a lot of time to get serious blog traffic.

That said, I disagree with putting off blogging [Read more...]

The Secret To Effective Business Blogging

A diet rich in soy and whey protein, found in ...

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Seems like most business blogs are like dieting…

Everyone has made a commitment to get the corporate blog going and the focus is very strong the first month on the business blog. The check off each day that a blog post is written and eagerly await the traffic numbers to see how it is doing. Then, one day, someone leaves a comment on a post like, “Interesting very to me, I thank you for interesting article.” (Little do they know, the person has added linking code to their post to generate back links to their site – that’s another blog post).  Getting that first comment is like losing those first couple of pounds on a diet.

But then something goes terribly wrong:

First, it gets harder and harder for the business to spend time on the blog. And after about a month, everyone wants it to work, but the spark just isn’t there. And so instead of posting daily, the business starts posting every few days, then every few weeks and about 90 days into the relationship, both sides realize they don’t love each other anymore and the relationship is on the rocks. Which begs the question, “What went wrong?”

Usually, what goes wrong with a business blog is that the team of bloggers either runs out of time, energy or ideas to turn into quality blog posts.

Blogging ROI is off the charts, especially if you blog effectively. In other words, you have to have something meaningful to say and do so every day. You see, blogs don’t work like static websites. The more you post, the more reward the blog provides:

1. Search engines add and drop blog articles faster. You go to the top faster, and you go away faster. Consistent, regular posts yield consistent, top rankings on search engines.

2. Other bloggers read your blog for ideas. Then they write posts referencing yours, increasing your blog’s audience. But they don’t see your ideas unless they show up in their RSS reader.

3. Social networks deliver traffic, but only if you have something that changes. No blog posts equals no changes equals no traffic from your social media initiative. More posts means more friends clicking to see what you’ve posted for them.

So, what do you do if you don’t see your blog though soft focus lenses anymore? Don’t give up. Either redouble your efforts to blog effectively or get some help.

See, your relationship with your blog isn’t a human one. Your blog won’t know the difference between you and a stand in ghost writer. Your girlfriend or boyfriend will.

Paul is the President of Professional Blog Service. PBS works with clients making strategic investments into business blogging, social media and search engine optimization.

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