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Archive for the 'Google' Category

Google Now Crawls Flash!

Posted by Josh Katinger

The folks at Google announced yesterday that their latest algorithm release will now be able to crawl and index text-based content that is inside Flash files. I love their wording…

In the past, web designers faced challenges if they chose to develop a site in Flash because the content they included was not indexable by search engines.

…understatement of the year! So now all the designers will be jumping for joy since they will have a comeback to the old SEO speech they’ve been getting for years. While we’ve always sustained that Flash and SEO efforts can be harmonious, this news certainly takes it to a whole new level.

So I hear you asking - “doesn’t this put the SEO’s (YOU Josh!) out of a job?” Not hardly. It basically makes our lives a bit easier in that we can focus our SEO conversations on important stuff like content and links, and perhaps set aside the whole Flash vs. HTML religious war. Hallelujah!

However, one important point to remember

At present, we are only discovering and indexing textual content in Flash files. If your Flash files only include images, we will not recognize or index any text that may appear in those images. Similarly, we do not generate any anchor text for Flash buttons which target some URL, but which have no associated text.

Also note that we do not index FLV files, such as the videos that play on YouTube, because these files contain no text elements.

The old best practices around having well-written, keyword-rich text information on your site still apply folks. Only now the text can sing and dance too!

Our Take on the Microsoft Bid For Yahoo!

Posted by Josh Katinger

The big news this week of course is that Microsoft has unveiled a bid to buy Yahoo! for $31 per share in cash and stock. That equates to a $44.6 billion offer. As most industry analysts and pundits quickly realized, this is basically Microsoft’s latest attempt to try and stack up in the search market vs. Google.

Microsoft has tried repeatedly to build, rebuild and optimize the various incarnations of their own search engine product and its associated pay per click market tools. To date, in my opinion, they haven’t come close to being successful and remain the third tier player after Google and Yahoo! in the lucrative paid search engine advertising market. So it makes a lot of sense that they would buy the number two player to combine forces and get a bigger piece of the market.

However, beyond just search, Yahoo! also has massively trafficked and advertised upon content properties like Yahoo! News and Yahoo! Finance. So they bring more to Microsoft’s table than just search, they are also a major competitor to the MSN content network.

But, in my mind the underlying theme in this potential transaction is that Microsoft seems to be saying “I give up” in trying to compete with Google on its own. By buying Yahoo! they can get a jump start in the right direction and get away from the “software company” stigma. As Google continues to build out web-based (and FREE) tools and applications for the enterprise (which we use here at Accession Media and love), Microsoft needs to remain relevant in this reshaped market - buying Yahoo! could be a big help.

Of course, since this announcement the big question to Google has been “are you scared?” I’ve seen at least two interviews with high ranking Google execs where they were polite - but you could tell they were holding back laughter. My feeling is that, if Microsoft does pull off this purchase, and THEN manages not to totally screw up Yahoo!, the combined entity will still just be second best in the paid search market. A little closer to Google, granted, but still second best.

Google Analytics Relaunched - Heavenly!

Posted by Josh Katinger

Google has provided website owners its Google Analytics website traffic tracking and analysis tool for free for quite some time now. When we heard that they were about to put a new face on what was already an excellent analytics tool I must admit that some of our clients and I were quite skeptical about how such a great offering could be improved upon and remain free. Oh how our skepticism was unfounded!

The new interface, features, and functionality are simply fantastic. We work with several clients who have various levels of analytics need. Our larger clients rely on detailed user segmentation that tools like HBX and Omniture can provide. But packages of that caliber come at quite a price…five figures a year and up usually. So the common question from our smaller clients is “what do these large, expensive platforms offer that Google Analytics doesn’t? What makes tools like HBX and Omniture worth all that money?”

Our usual answer focuses heavily on the availability of ad hoc analysis features, virtually limitless and sometimes instantaneous data segmentation, and data portability (being able to pull the data via feed or API into other applications). Also, HBX’s Report Builder tool is worth its weight in gold. However this new release of Google Analytics really pushes the envelope into a few of these areas, namely ad-hoc analysis and segmentation.

The ability to slice, dice and filter data in the new interface is enhanced and the mostly-Flash-based application is incredibly fast. The new layout of key metrics, with a big focus on “key performance indicators” like pages per visit is a huge nod to the works of Stephen Few and Eric Peterson (two people of which we are big fans!). Additionally, the “spark lines” for quick trend visualization and super clean interface overall are a literal nod to the modern godfather of graphical representation Edward Tufte.

You can also set up auto emailed reports that are delivered to your (or your bosses) email inbox at whatever frequency you wish (daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly). This feature is huge for busy executives and business owners who don’t have the time to login to an analytics tool everyday and check on their traffic. With this feature, the info you need is sitting right in your inbox as often as you need it.

Finally, with the new Google product it is possible to segment your analytics data by user type, or a user behavior. For example: if you can get users to tell you their occupation via a web form, you can segment your traffic on that information - show all your stats for just the doctors, or just the landscapers, etc. You could segment your data by those visitors that purchased and those that didn’t. Those that filled out a contact form and those that didn’t. How are their behaviors different? How can you encourage the more desired behavior? There are a million and one possible things that can be done with this, too many to list here.

There is a lot more to say about this new release of Google Analytics, but the bottom line for our clients is: Google just got you get even closer to the high-end analytics tools, with a much lower investment. The product itself is still FREE, the only cost is the time taken on setting it up and customizing things to track your sites conversion goals, funnels, etc specifically.

Please contact us if you would like to talk about how implementing Google Analytics can help you understand your online customers better. If you’re in the NYC metro area, the coffee’s on us, you bring the questions

Adding a Sitemap - More Than Just Usability

Posted by Josh Katinger

Does your website have a sitemap? A sitemap is a page on your site that lists all the other pages on the site, usually in a tree structure so that a user can easily navigate to any part of the site without rooting around through navigation (here is our sitemap). Aside from the usability service that a sitemap offers your site’s human visitors, it also makes a nice place for search engine spiders to go and quickly understand the layout of a website and index all its pages in a fast and effective manner. It wasn’t long before Google realized this and embraced an XML format version of the classic sitemap as a tool for webmasters to help the Googlebot crawl their site in an orderly fashion. They launched Google Sitemaps (here is our XML sitemap).

I’ve been using it for some time now for a few client sites and it is a marvelous tool for understanding the Googlebot’s activity on a given site, and also for helping the Googlebot find the important content on a site. However it was only useful with Google. The use of the XML sitemap protocol had little to no understandable effect on rankings in the other two major search engines - Yahoo! and MSN. However, last week Yahoo! and MSN announced that they too will be adopting the Sitemap protocol and will offer a tool set to manage their search engines interaction with XML sitemaps. Yahoo!’s sitemap functionality is part of its already excellent Site Explorer tools, and MSN’s functionality is yet to be launched.

If you already have an XML sitemap, you just doubled (or tripled) the bang for the bucks (or the time) you put into it. Submit it to Yahoo! and enjoy. If you don’t have an XML sitemap, here are links to an array of tools (mostly free) that you can use to get one implemented.

Need help getting your site ready to capitalize on the benefits of XML sitemaps? We’re always happy to help…