blogWS.com: Blog for Webmasters

blogWS.com is news weblog for webmasters provides information on IT, IT enables services, Web, Internet, Search Engine Optimization and search engines.

Friday, April 22, 2005

Google Your Search History!

Google Inc., yesterday announced the beta release of it's new search feature called 'My Search History', which can store a user's Google queries, along with the results.

The new search history tool also stores browsing behavior and tracks it over time, thereby personalizing the search results. With this, Google is building up a backlog of searches that a user has made. Once the history has been started, Google begins to analyze the trends, and cluster the searches into groups or categories. Once a new search is made, the user is also displayed a history of similar searches, plus Google’s suggestions for the most relevant of search results.

As users perform new searches, over time, their previous search results will be personalized to match the new query, and served up adjacent to new results. The service is avilable for free but requires users to be signed-in to their Google accounts.

"How many times have you used Google to find an obscure funny website or fun facts about 'The Wizard of Oz' but then got distracted by other web pages and tasks? I know - me too. Wouldn't it be great to find them again, and for that matter review all your Google searches over time? Which is exactly why we built My Search History," said Avni Shah, a member of the My Search History team, on the Googleblog.

Wednesday, April 20, 2005

Adobe to Acquire Macromedia for $3.4 Billion in Stock

Adobe Systems Incorporated, today announced a definitive agreement to acquire Macromedia, Inc., in an all-stock transaction valued at approximately $3.4 billion.

Under the terms of the agreement, which has been approved by both boards of directors, Macromedia stockholders will receive, at a fixed exchange ratio, 0.69 shares of Adobe common stock for every share of Macromedia common stock in a tax-free exchange. Based on Adobe's and Macromedia's closing prices on Friday, April 15, 2005, this represents a price of $41.86 per share of Macromedia common stock. Upon the close of the transaction, Macromedia stockholders will own approximately 18 percent of the combined company on a pro forma basis.

The combination of Adobe and Macromedia will provide customers a more powerful set of solutions for creating, managing and delivering compelling content and experiences across multiple operating systems, devices and media. In the combined company, Chizen will continue as CEO and Shantanu Narayen will remain president and COO. Stephen Elop, president and CEO of Macromedia, will join Adobe as president of worldwide field operations.

"Both Macromedia and Adobe are passionate about creating and enabling great experiences across a wide range of devices and operating systems," said Elop. "Our combined teams will be a powerful force for innovation around cutting-edge platforms for delivering content and applications."

"Customers are calling for integrated software solutions that enable them to create, manage and deliver a wide range of compelling content and applications - from documents and images to audio and video," said Bruce Chizen, CEO, Adobe. "By combining our powerful development, authoring and collaboration software - along with the complementary functionality of PDF and Flash - Adobe has the opportunity to bring this vision to life with an industry-defining technology platform."

Saturday, April 09, 2005

Ten Steps To A Well Optimized Website - 1

Over this ten part series we will go through ten essential elements and steps to optimizing a site

This is part one of ten in this search engine positioning series. In part one we will outline how to choose the keyword phrases most likely to produce a high ROI for your search engine positioning efforts. Over this ten part series we will go through ten essential elements and steps to optimizing a site. Some steps take a few hours, some may take months depending on the competition, but in the end and if done correctly you will have a well optimized site that will place well and hold it's positioning.

Of course all website's fluctuate up and down however well optimized sites will spend more time on the upper end of the rankings than poorly optimized or spammy sites which may see high rankings but which will lose those rankings over time.

The Ten Steps We Will Go Through Are:
  • Keyword Selection
  • Content
  • Site Structure
  • Optimization
  • Internal Linking
  • Human Testing
  • Submissions
  • Link Building
  • Monitoring
  • The Extras

Step One - Keyword Selection

Arguably, keyword selection is the single most important stage in the entire optimization process. If you do not choose the correct keyword phrases you will not maximize your ROI on this campaign. I mention ROI and use it as a reminder that keyword selection is not necessarily about looking for the most searched phrases. A profitable optimization is one which produces the greatest return on investment for the time and money that are available to put towards it.

Bigger Is Not Always Better

If you are a web designer in Seattle who has just started your own business, you could make "web design" the targeted keyword phrase for your site as it certainly has the highest number of searches with 707,962 in September 2004 according to the "Overture Search Term Suggestion Tool". If you have thousands of dollars and many months to dedicate just to attaining those rankings it could be done however, would that be the best use of your time? Alternatively you could target "seattle web site design" with 5,070 searches in September. A Google link check shows the number of links for the top three competitors for the Seattle search had 132, 21, and 47 respectively whereas for "web design" the top three had 18,700, 5,420, and 1,310 incoming links each.

With a good site you would get more work than you could handle with 5,070 searches on Overture alone if you were ranking well on the major search engines. This would clearly provide the highest return on investment for the small business owner who most certainly does not have the time and money available to target "web design" and who wouldn't have the manpower to take advantage of the rankings even if they were attained.

This is an extreme example however it clearly illustrates that sometimes the phrase with the highest number of searches is not necessarily the best target for your business.

Phrases That Sell

Another consideration you will want to make when choosing your keyword phrases is whether or not they are "buy phrases". Phrases with a high number of searches that are not "buy phrases" will tend to bring a lot of traffic, however the conversion ratio will be far lower. Should you choose to target "buy phrases" you may not get the same number of visitors however your ratio of visitors to sales will be much higher.

In this example let's assume you are the marketing director for a well-known accounting company. There will be many choices you can make for your targeted keyword phrase. The top searched phrases in September 2004 that were accounting-related are:

  • "accounting" with 156,095 searches
  • "accounting software" with 54,621 searches
  • "accounting job" with 32,015 searches
  • "accounting services" with 19,260 searches
  • "accounting firm" with 13,089 searches

Many might go with their gut instinct and attempt to target "accounting". The problem with this phrase (other than the competition for it) is that the people doing that search are not necessarily even looking for an accounting firm. They may be accounting students, small business owners not interested in hiring an accountant but just looking for tax information, etc. "Accounting software" and "accounting job" are irrelevant, which leaves us with "accounting services" and "accounting firm" as the two main options.

From this point an evaluation of competition should be performed and the pros and cons of making each the primary target should be weighed based on the amount of work it will take to attain the phrase vs. how many searches there are for that phrase.

Often promotions that target multiple "buy phrases" will end up far more successful that those targeting phrases based solely on the number of searches due to the increased conversions and generally decreased competition.

Tools To Use

Armed now with knowledge on how to recognize and choose between different phrases there remains only one question, how do you know which phrases are even searched? Fortunately there are a couple great resources out there to help you find out how many searches are performed for specific phrases. They Are:

The Overture Search Term Suggestion Tool
A decent tool for researching keyword phrases. It indicates which phrases had the highest numbers of searches on Overture during the previous month. The biggest weakness it has, as far as applying it to the natural search engines, is that Overture counts singular and plural as the same and also corrects misspelling so the totals are all lumped together in this tool whereas on the natural engines they are considered differently.

WordTracker
WordTracker is very similar to Overture's Search Term Suggestion Tool except that this tool differentiates between plural and singular searches, does not correct spelling (i.e. it gives the number of searches for misspellings rather than correcting them and giving a total for correct and misspelled words) and gives the results in predicted numbers of searches over all the engines per day rather than just one engine over a month.

They have a great free trial that doesn't give you as many results but which can be very useful.

When using these tools I recommend beginning with the Overture Search term Suggestion Tool and once you've narrowed down your choices, switch to WordTracker to insure that you're getting the right information in regards to tense (singular vs. plural) and also that the numbers match. Sometimes you will find that the numbers are completely different from each tool. In this event you will have to use your best judgment.

Don't forget to check misspellings when using WordTracker!

Tips & Tricks

There are no real "tricks" to uncovering the keywords you should target however there are a few tips. A few pointers that will help you maximize your keyword selection:

Think like a layman. Just because you know your industry terms doesn't mean
that everyone does. Don't just think of the words you use to describe your
products/services, think of the words you would use if you knew nothing about it
other than the fact that you needed it. You may want to recruit a friend and
have them run some searches for you.

Think like an expert. On the other side of the coin, there may be phrases
used specifically in your industry that people "in the know" would use to search
for your products and/or services. Be sure to look into these phrases. You just
may find some hidden gems that no one else has thought to target.

Don't target too many phrases. Some SEOs and webmasters target dozens and
sometimes even hundreds of phrases. The end result, they often miss the ones
they most wanted to attain. Keeping yourself and your keyword list focused will
keep your site focused. If your site is focused you'll rank higher for the
phrases that will produce the highest return on investment.

Testing

Test your phrases. If there is any debate about whether a search phrase is worth targeting it's often a good idea to test the conversions through pay-per-click engines . Set up an account with a PPC engine and bid on the phrases that you would like to target.

You have to remember that the PPC engines do not provide for the same amount of traffic as the natural engines. Test the initial phrases, test alternative phrases, and see which produce the best results. Something else to keep in mind is that PPC are not natural engines. If your ROI is not as high on more costly phrases that doesn't mean they won't produce the higher return on the natural engines where a top ranking does not cost money per click.

In the end you will have confirmed a solid list of keyword phrases and if the PPC campaign is providing a good return on investment you might as well keep it running and enjoy the "bonus" traffic that it provides.

Thanks to Dave Davies

Saturday, April 02, 2005

The demand for .IN Domains is still unbroken

Germany is still the # 1 country infront of .U.S. for .IN DomainRegistrations outside of India, resulting in a total market share ofapprox. 10.8%.

.IN the official ccTLD of India recently liberalized their registrationpolicies allowing anybody worldwide to register .IN (co.in, org.in,net.in, firm.in, gen.in and ind.in) Domains. The relaunch of .IN withthe new policies commenced in January with a 21 day Sunrise-Period,whereas interested parties could register their trademarks. During thisso-called Sunrise Period more than 3.400 Domains were registeredsuccessfully. The first domain registered in Germany during the SunrisePeriod was "Bertelsmann.in" and the first domain registered during the "Landrush"(live registration) period on February 16th 2005 was "furniture.in".

More than 52% of all .IN domains registered so far, were during thefirst 24 hours of the registry opening their gateway to the public onFebruary 16th 2005. Since then (as of March 13th 2005) more than 9.500.IN domains were registered by German registrants. Afilias Inc,. theregistry service provider for .IN, has counted individual registrantsfrom more than 108 countries worldwide.

Even with the successful launch of .IN and the fact that 52% of all domains registered so far were executed on the first day, the demand for .IN Domains still remains unbroken. Many attractive domains are still available directly beneath .IN or beneath theThird-Level-Domains "co.in", "net.in", "org.in", "firm.in", "gen.in (general)" and "ind.in (Individuals)".

Source: Afilias Limited

Friday, April 01, 2005

Ask Jeeves' Bloglines Launches Package Tracking Feature

Ask Jeeves, Inc., a provider of information retrieval products, announced on Wednesday that Bloglines, a free online service for searching, subscribing, publishing and sharing news feeds, blogs and web content has released new capabilities that help consumers cusomize and monitor dynamic web information.

According to the company, with these new capabilities, Bloglines will move beyond aggregating general-audience blogs and RSS news feeds to enable individuals to receive updates that are personal to their daily lives. Currently, people can track the shipping progress of package deliveries from FedEx, UPS, and the United States Postal Service within their Bloglines MyFeeds page. In future, Bloglines readers can acquire unique-to-me information on Bloglines, such as neighborhood weather updates and stock portfolio tracking.

"Bloglines is a Universal Inbox that captures all kinds of dynamic information that helps busy individuals be more productive throughout the day-at the office, at school, or on the go," said Mark Fletcher, vice president and general manager of Bloglines at Ask Jeeves. "With an index of more than 370 million blog and news feed articles in seven languages, we're already one of the largest wells of dynamic web information. With unique-to-me news updates we're aiming to be the most comprehensive and useful personalized information resource on the web."

XML Search Engine Begins Beta Testing

DocSoft, a provider of XML software solutions, yesterday announced that it is seeking qualified beta participants for its XML search engine, called 'X3.NET'.

The software being developed using Microsoft's .NET Framework, will be optimized for Windows Server 2003. It will also provide the capability to index formats such as HTML, Microsoft Office documents, CGM and PDF, while still providing true, context searching of XML-based documents, claims the company. The comapny plans to start public beta testing X3.NET on May 15th, 2005 and expects to release the software September 15th, 2005.

"The idea behind this new search technology is to provide more intuitive options and informational results to the end user through XML's inherent ability to make documents 'smarter'," said Andrey Kulik, the lead developer for the project. "X3.NET will make all searches effective and easy. Indexing and searching a structured document versus an unstructured document can provide some unique capabilities not available in blind searching."