Twitter Micro-Blogging

 
Twitter is not just something birds do.

This week I attended the WordCamp Fraser Valley session in Langley. It was excellent with a great deal to learn about the WordPress blogging software from some fine speakers. However the biggest revelation to me was that Vancouver is perhaps the Twitter capital of Canada.

Like many others I had wondered about the allure of Twitter. It is a very simple webpage with a box where you can tell the world something about your current status. What you type will be seen by any of your followers, if they happen to be looking. You can send that message from your mobile phone if you choose, and it all seems very simple. How could so many in the audience be such enthusiasts? I was at the other end of the spectrum with people like Steven Hodson, who proclaims that Twitter is Not a Micro-Blogging Tool.

My shortsightedness on this is explained by the fact that I never read the instructions. Indeed how could such a simple tool need instructions? How wrong I was.

The major item that has come onto my radar screen is that Twitter now has Search. It acquired Summize and has integrated this as Twitter Search. Just check out some of the Search Operators. You can type these search operators directly into the search box. (Alternatively, you can use the advanced search form to automatically construct your query.) Just look at some of the examples they give:

  • "happy hour" near:"san francisco" containing the exact phrase "happy hour" and sent near "san francisco".
  • movie -scary :) containing "movie", but not "scary", and with a positive attitude.
  • flight :( containing "flight" and with a negative attitude.


How does a search function distinguish between a positive attitude and a negative attitude. It’s still one of the unanswered questions I have.

Of course 140 characters and spaces is a very short post even for a micro-blog. However you can tag individual tweaks by using what is called a hashtag. Provided you register with hashtags.org then you can do searches such as #haiku to find all tweaks containing the hashtag “haiku”. You can also have Realtime Tracking of Twitter Hashtags if you wish.

Once I realized that Twitter was more than just a small box I decided I should read the instructions. They are labeled the Official Twitter Commands. These allow you to keep Twitter under control from phone, IM, and most 3rd party applications by using the designated Twitter commands? On all devices they give you fine-grained control of Twitter updates.

For example type in STATS and this command returns your number of followers, how many people you’re following, and which words you’re tracking. Twitter Tracking is a feature allowing you to receive on your mobile devices all Twitter updates that contain a word of choice. Send track+keyword to Twitter from your phone or IM to get updates containing that word. For example: track Obama to receive updates matching Obama. For now, track is for phone and IM only but Web support is potentially coming soon.

If you have not read the instructions for Twitter, studying the above information will be very worthwhile. Who knows, if you find blogging would be too much of a challenge for you, perhaps micro-blogging will give you similar pleasure for much less effort.

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Tags Attract Eyes

Tags take you where Google doesn’t.

What is the most popular three letter word on the Internet as far as Google knows? We probably should disregard words that describe the Internet such as net (4.95 billion entries) or Web (4.33 billion entries). If you’re thinking sex (824 million entries), you are wrong. It’s that humble word tag (1.04 billion entries).

Surprisingly, Google does not have a definition for tag, but you can see lots of examples all around you.

tag mind map

Tag is a word you’ll be hearing more and more about. Another word, you could use would be label. The search engines using computer-based algorithms sometimes have difficulty finding that article you know exists on say, ‘artificial intelligence’. If only the author had tagged or labeled his article ‘artificial intelligence’, then your chances of finding it would be much higher. You can use a service like Technorati, which tries to tag as much of the Web as it can.

To make the popular tags in a blog more visible, you can use what is called a tag cloud. This has been added to this blog in the right sidebar, and it is also being displayed in the other SMM blogs. This is a feature that is simplicity in itself to implement if you’re using the WordPress software. If you click on any link in that tag cloud, then you will see a list of the posts that carry that tag. The tag archive web page also displays a longer list of tags, together with the categories under which posts here are listed.

If the simple logic of the tag does not convince you, then further proof is in this week’s news item that the tag is getting a powerful friend. Sir Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the Internet, is receiving a $350,000 grant from the James S and James L. Knight Foundation to help refine news searches by employing more sophisticated tagging, way upstream. He and Martin Moore are working with Reuters and the BBC to figure out how to incorporate “source tagging” into routine journalistic workflow.

If you are not using tags yet, isn’t it time you should start. Guten Tag.

Related:
Effective Tagging For Both Usability & SEOStephan Spencer

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Does Google Need An Ethics Policy Like The New York Times?

Google has a paid link dilemma, at least according to Patrick Altoft (tip of the hat to Lee Messenger). As he says:

The reason Google doesn?t like paid links is obvious and understandable from their point of view. Google quite simply doesn?t want websites to be able to buy their way to the top of the search engine rankings.

As I commented there:

Google is really a publisher. It publishes its search results. It adds paid advertisements and the more you pay the more visible your Adwords will be. It is trying to maintain that the non-Adwords content is commercial free. However it realizes that big advertisers may well spend money to get higher in the organic results ( the publication side of the business). It needs to be visible in trying to preserve the integrity of that noncommercial content.

Clearly Identifying Advertising

This is not a new issue. Back at Christmas 2003, I offered Google a suggestion on how its Search Engine Report Pages (SERPs) might appear.

Google SERP Mockup

Google SERP mockup

This is almost like a newspaper page. In a good newspaper, there is a strict division between the advertising side and the editorial side. Similarly, in Google there is a strict division, a Chinese wall some say, between Search and Advertising. In the image, the Search section is white and labelled Information Zone. Here Google will serve relevant informational pages that relate to the meaning of your search. The blue section is labelled Commercial Zone and here Google delivers Advertising that is in context with the meaning of your search.

Such a clear distinction is what the Federal Trade Commission has ruled must occur on Search Engine Report Pages (SERP’s). Indeed if Google chose to show each content on different colored backgrounds as in the image, perhaps everyone would win. Those who wish to read the advertisements can easily identify them.

Ethical Publishing

Google will be 10 years old this coming September. The New York Times will be 157 years old in the same month. So it is had longer to grapple with these issues. Perhaps its Handbook of Values and Practices on Ethical Journalism (pdf file) might provide a model for Google. In particular, one can read the following:

72. The Times treats advertisers as fairly and openly as it treats readers and news sources. The relationship between The Times and advertisers rests on the understanding, long observed in all departments, that news and advertising are strictly separate – that those who deal with either one have distinct obligations and interests and neither group will try to influence the other.

Google might also take to heart what the New York Times says about integrity.

At a time of growing and even justified public suspicion about the impartiality, accuracy and integrity of some journalists and some journalism, it is imperative that The Times and its staff maintain the highest possible standards to insure that we do nothing that might erode readers? faith and confidence in our news columns. This means that staff members should be vigilant in avoiding any activity that might pose an actual or apparent conflict of interest and thus threaten the newspaper’s ethical standing. And it also means that the journalism we practice daily must be beyond reproach.

The Search Engine Report Pages (SERP’s) that Google produce around the world clearly have a much bigger impact than the New York Times. Given Google’s size, the need for integrity is paramount.

Is Google A Publisher?

Although a Doctor in Philosophy might not agree, the person in the street would have little difficulty with this question. Just take a look at Google News for example. Its tagline states: Search and browse 4,500 news sources updated continuously. It is so similar to a newspaper that Google even has to add a disclaimer at the foot of the page. The selection and placement of stories on this page were determined automatically by a computer program.

Clearly there is a major difference between a New York Times publication and a Search Engine Report Page (SERP) produced by Google. What Google publishes is entirely created by computer. Every entry is there because Google’s search algorithm deemed it more relevant than items lower down in the list. The actual text for each item is then developed by an automatic snippet production process. No human author is involved.

The problem arises because Google’s search algorithm places some weight on the number of links pointing to any given web page entry. That is the core principle of the PageRank concept, which is what distinguishes Google from other search engines. Paid links may be one way in which website owners try to influence what appears in the Google SERPs. However this is only a tiny tip of the iceberg, as compared with the way major companies can influence where their websites appear in lists. Major companies can easily create a network of associated sub companies, affiliates and partners. These might quite naturally link to the mother company website. These links are technically not paid links but certainly generate benefits for their creators. It would however be a task worthy of King Solomon to decide which should be deemed paid links and which not.

Google has decided to take a different path, which could be viewed as undemocratic. It seems to be working with a very narrow definition of a paid link. This is a link that has been created because cash was received directly for its creation. Large companies can create links in much more creative ways and avoid the paid label being applied to their links. The present Google approach is likely to hit smaller companies and of course the more who are affected the louder the volume of complaints. If they wished to create the maximum noise about their approach, this is the way to do it. If effective, it could reduce the volume of such directly paid links. It avoids entirely the difficult question of links that are created by big company networks.

The Advertising/Editorial Content Dilemma

It’s not an easy problem for Google to resolve. As Louis Hau points out, even Newspapers Confront The Enemy Within:

Newsrooms have long cultivated a strict “church-state” division between themselves and their papers’ advertising departments, fearing a loss of independence and integrity–and with it the trust of readers. Like it or not, the newspaper industry’s increasingly grim financial outlook leaves editors with little choice but to work across the aisle.

Whereas newspapers may be discussing life-and-death issues here, that’s hardly the case for Google. Whether the Google Adwords program is influencing its approach to paid links is not something they declare. Paid links are certainly a competitor for a share of any online marketing budget. Some feel that Google can set its own rules in its own publications. However when a company becomes so dominant in any market place, perhaps the normal free competition rules need some restraint.

If you feel strongly on this, you may choose to add your comments here or perhaps join the ongoing discussion on this at Cre8asite Forums.

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Google Downgrades Dot-Coms Value

Google is quicker when finding companies

Robin Cannon in Search Engine Journal asks the somewhat puzzling question, ‘Is Google Trumping The URL?‘ Apparently more and more people use Google to find websites than type in the URL in the address bar of their browser. As he says:

When there?s a simple box to fill in with your search term, and you know exactly what you?re looking, why bother to use the address bar? If statistics on popular searches are anything to go by, it looks like many people aren?t bothering with that inconvenient ?www? and ?.com? and are just going straight through Google.

Hitwise UK just published its most searched for brands 2007 statistics, and the fastest rising US search terms are widely available. Both suggest that Google users know exactly where they want to browse to, and just use the search box to give them the link to click.

It’s certainly an intriguing finding. It brings with it a very important downgrading of the value of a dot-com domain name. If anyone is typing in a website URL in the browser address bar, then they may well guess that it’s a dot-com domain. So they type say ‘cnn.com’, hit the [Enter] key and will be shown the www.cnn.com website. If they are somewhat computer savvy, then they need only type cnn and hit [Control][Enter] and the same website opens up. That works for almost any browser, be it Internet Explorer, Firefox, Opera, Safari or even exotic ones like Flock.

Using the Google search box instead of the address bar opens up a whole new world. Typing in only the domain name without the dot-com may or may not bring you to the dot-com website. It all depends what Google feels is the most relevant result for the word you have typed in. If you can get your dot-net, dot-org or dot-ca website to be #1 in Google, then you’ll win the searcher’s click. Dot-com domains are no longer invincible on the web. As so often happens, the Internet with Google’s help is levelling the playing field

Reference:
SWOT That Company Name
I?m Feeling Lucky, Google

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Stanley Park, Vancouver, Google Search

Google is the way to find places and things

Apparently those responsible for Stanley Park are concerned that people may just type in StanleyPark into their browser address field and end up on the website of Gerry O’Neil who operates the horse-drawn carriage tours in the Park. It is true that most browsers will behave exactly like that. So according to the Vancouver Sun, the Park Board is asking Mr. O’Neil to give them the StanleyPark.com domain. Apparently they much prefer the dot com domain to the StanleyPark.ca domain, which also exists.

What they seem to be forgetting is that more and more people use Google nowadays to find almost anything. Only a tiny minority would try to guess the domain that might apply. Would that be StanleyPark.com or Stanley-Park.com or something else? Google is so much easier. Doing a Google search for ‘Stanley Park’ quickly brings up a number of relevant websites. Surprisingly not too many of them look like StanleyPark.com. The closest are the following:

  • #7 www.stanleypark.org for Welcome to the Stanley Park of Westfield, MA 01085
  • #17 www.friendsofstanleypark.org.uk The website of Friends of Stanley Park, Blackpool, UK
  • #79 mystanleypark.com All about Stanley Park in Vancouver, Canada

You have to go as far as #161 to find the cherished stanleypark.com. So is it really so important to have the dot com? stanleypark.ca isn’t even in the top 500 so that’s not the answer.

It’s a pity that those dot ca domains aren’t getting more recognition. As Michael Geist points out in The Toronto Star, the dot-ca domain name policy puts us in the Internet vanguard.

The Canadian Internet Registration Authority, the agency that manages the dot-ca domain, celebrated its one-millionth domain name registration. A noteworthy development is that CIRA also quietly announced the implementation of a new “whois” policy that will better protect the privacy of hundreds of thousands of Canadians and serve as a model for domain name registries around the world.

However fine the attributes of a dot-ca, it doesn’t seem to get respect. For example, the Royal Bank doesn’t own rbc.ca. However if you do a search for ‘Royal Bank’, then most of the initial entries are for Royal Bank of Canada websites, with the rbc.com coming in at #3. rbc.ca doesn’t feature in the first 500. Nor should it, since it is the Recreation and Business Centre. It can’t even appear in the first 100 for a search of its exact name.

The bottom line on all this is that the domain name has very little influence on how Google or the other major search engines choose what is relevant when someone searches. If a website has good content on its subject and other websites link to it as a reference, then it will feature highly in Google. That search engine visibility is the most important online strength a domain can have.

Reference: SWOT That Company Name

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POW! – Surprise Or Entertainment

POW! Did that get your attention? Was it the POW or the exclamation mark. Apparently comic book legend Stan Lee, one of the forces behind Spider-Man and the X-Men, is helping to develop a new superhero property, “Legion of 5.” His company POW! Entertainment has teamed up with Utah investment firm Brighton Partners and Vancouver-based producer Rainmaker Entertainment to turn the concept into a series of computer-animated films. Plans call for Rainmaker to create the look of the characters as well as develop and produce the feature-length computer-animated film properties. Separately, Stan Lee has already got three projects on the go at Disney, which houses POW!

Using that exclamation point to draw attention is a decidedly human approach. Andy Nulman has adopted the same device twice in his blog, Pow! Right Between The Eyes! He’s a strong proponent of the power of surprise in getting attention. However both Stan Lee and Andy Nulman may not realize that we live in a Google world. Many people find their way around almost entirely by Googling where they want to go. Unfortunately Google entirely disregards that exclamation mark. Here’s what they say on the Use of punctuation in Search.

Google doesn’t recognize special characters such as exclamation points, question marks, or the @ sign. These types of characters are so common that including them in a search would greatly slow the delivery of the search results.

Yahoo!

Both Stan Lee and Andy Nulman probably knew that, since their domain names are missing the exclamation mark as well. They’re not the first to be faced with that dilemma. The most well-known example is Yahoo!. Their domain is of course www.yahoo.com

So is that game over for the exclamation mark as we all go relentlessly into an increasingly cyber-world. Not quite, since Yahoo! is trying to gain some respect for that punctuation mark. Here’s how.

The exclamation point (!) is a feature unique to Yahoo! Search. It means “take me there!”

If you search with a “!” added at the end of your favorite Yahoo! feature or service , you’ll bypass search results and go directly to the main page of that service on Yahoo!. This is a new way to navigate throughout the Yahoo! Network.

All we can say is ‘Good Luck!

Reference: SWOT That Company (Yahoo!) Name

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Are Google SERP Ranking Formats Changing?

Google’s mission is to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful. Useful of course means being of use or service. It does not necessarily mean that users find it works well for them. That would require user tests to measure what is often called user experience. That user-centric or customer-centric approach still does not get the priority it should.

This reflection came to mind in considering some changes that seem to be happening to Google’s Search Engine Report Pages (SERPs) for keyword queries. Changes seem to sneak in without any obvious mechanism to get user feedback. Recently for example we noted that Google Blog Post Snippets are now dated in the language of the searcher. A more fundamental change may now be occurring but again it may be slowly creeping in.

We noted that one visitor to this blog had searched for ‘Montreal bagels Fairmount bagel’ and got the following SERP.

Google search for Montreal bagels Fairmount bagel

Note that references to this blog appear at both #2 and #4. Normally a second result from the same domain will appear as an indented result under the first appearance. This separate listing is what I sometimes see at Yahoo! but never at Google. Note also that the snippet at #2 included the date of the blog post as the first part of the snippet. The snippet at #4, which is a post from the same blog, does not have the date as the first part of the snippet.

I pointed out this somewhat remarkable change in a discussion at Cre8asite Forums. Commenters there and Barry Schwartz at Search Engine RoundTable all tested the same keyword query and none could find the same results. Indeed neither could I when I tried to repeat the same search.

Apparently it is not an isolated occurrence. Another visitor to this blog yesterday was searching for ‘British pensions in Canada’. Here is the result:

Google search for \'British pensions in Canada\'

Two independent blog posts from this blog appear as separate items in the SERP. On this occasion both also show the date as the first part of the snippet.

Is this a forerunner of a new format that will be rolled out everywhere? Which do you prefer? Only two items from any domain grouped together or relevant items appearing wherever they should in the report. Why not join the discussion at Cre8asite Forums or add your comments here. Presumably Google will be interested in whatever you have to say on this.

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Google and 301 Permanent Redirects – all you wanted to know and were afraid to ask

For most blogs and websites, Google is one of the major sources of visitor traffic. That is why it is so important to ensure that, when any web page is moved, it retains its visibility in Google. What is involved in this is what is called a 301 Permanent Redirect. The References below give a good account of the many ways this can be done. This blog has just moved and the good news is that the move was done in such a way that the Google visibility was maintained unchanged throughout the move. The specifics involved will be discussed in a more detailed post in the near future.

The reason for this post is that by accident some interesting details have emerged about how Google currently handles these 301 Permanent Redirects. Whether this was done in previous versions of the algorithm or whether it will continue to be the way they are handled is entirely unknown.

The common wisdom is that all three major search engines handle 301 redirects the same, that is to say they ignore the original URL and instead index the destination URL. This may not be exactly the way things work.

The reason for suggesting this is that a visitor to the blog on March 2nd arrived by doing a Google search for ‘Frank and Gordon‘. Frank and Gordon are the names of the Canadian beavers used in the Bell Canada advertising. This is what that visitor would have seen as part of that Google Search Engine Report Page (SERP).

Frank and Gordon

You may notice that the old address for the blog post is shown as entry #3 and the new address for the blog post is at entry #4. Clicking on either brings you to the same new blog post since the old address is redirected to the new address. However clearly both URLs are still maintained in the Google index.

The Old blog post cached version shows a cached date of February 18th. The New blog post cached version shows a cached date February 28th. The new version of the blog was put online on February 26th and the 301 Permanent Redirect from old to new was put in place at that time.

As of the time of posting on March 3, both versions are still featured in the SERP but now the New version is at #3 and the Old version at #4. Perhaps this indicates that the old version is never dropped from the index but merely gradually loses all its PageRank as this is transferred to the New Version and sinks without trace.

Useful References on 301 Permanent Redirects
Permanent Redirect with HTTP 301 – a very complete and technical account of a variety of methods for doing the redirect.
Permanent 301 Redirect, Can someone post an example or a link? – a High Ranking Forums discussion
301, Parking and Other Redirects for SEOs ( FAQ )Ian McAnerin
Canonicalization: The Gospel of HTTP 301Hamlet Batista writes on a related problem
301 Permanent Redirect to Error404.htm Page is a Problem to Google – an interesting discussion on a related problem

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Christmas shopping for the Nintendo Wii with Google

Where Oh Where is that Nintendo Wii?

Ryan Kim of the San Francisco Chronicle has just provided Tips for those on the hunt for the elusive, desirable Nintendo Wii. Apparently it’s a really tough challenge as she recounts.

Kristie Lauborough’s unsuccessful quest for the popular Nintendo Wii has been repeated throughout the land in what has become an unprecedented distinction for Nintendo. The Japanese game maker has had the hottest toy gift two holiday seasons in a row, a title that brings bragging rights, but also stokes criticism and frustration from those unable to find the console.

Many people will turn to Google in such a search and it’s instructive to see how Google tries to help. If you are someone selling Nintendo Wiis, how can you get maximum visibility in the Google search?

Google Search for Nintendo Wii

The first thing to note is that if you are relying on what is called organic SEO (Search Engine Optimization), it’s getting tougher and tougher. You can hardly complain since Google is providing free visibility. Quite naturally, Google prefers to list at the top sellers from whom it makes money. The free riders are being pushed down the page. At the top you can see two sellers who have paid to have Adwords ads appearing.

Interestingly just below them are three sellers who have not paid. They have added their products to Google Base, which is a free service. If you use the Google Shopping link or do a Product Search, then you are searching through the products in Google Base. Any seller would be well advised to check through information on Google Base and there is also a Google Base Blog.

In such searches, Google makes money by publishing Adwords ads around the Product Search results. Google is also encouraging sellers to use Google Checkout. That’s why it allows purchasers to click on that Google Checkout link to scan sellers offering that service.

For the moment Google Checkout is a loss leader for Google. It has decided to continue to offer Google Checkout free through February 1st.

Currently, Checkout doesn’t charge credit card processing fees, which means Google swallows the expense every time, a program that was supposed to end in two weeks. Looks like Google couldn’t stand the idea of sending anyone an actual bill (or more likely, they wanted to extend the program through the end of the post-holiday shopping season), so free Checkout continues, for one more month.

After February 1, 2008 Google will start charging transaction on every order that gets processed via Google Checkout. “You will still be able to earn free transaction processing if you use Google AdWords – for every $1 you spend on AdWords, you will be able to process $10 of sales through Checkout for free. For additional sales, you’ll be charged a low 2.0% plus $0.20 per transaction. Fees are the same for all payment types (Visa, MasterCard, American Express, and Discover) and there are no monthly, setup, or gateway fees.”

More details on this are available from the Google BlogNewsChannel.

Google is hoping that sellers will find this a win-win situation. Naturally Google supports those sellers through whom it can generate revenues. Even if you’re selling something as elusive as a Nintendo Wii, you need to be visible. Pay for Adwords and use Google Checkout and you get the best of both worlds. Increasingly others will find themselves squeezed out as the above key word search shows.

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I Feel Lucky Doesn’t Work For Google

I Feel Lucky doesn’t need an ad blocker.

The I Feel Lucky button on the Google keyword search page has been there forever. Many have questioned its utility given that even Google acknowledges few people click on it. Perhaps it’s nostalgia on the part of the two founders. Perhaps it’s a subtle marketing ploy to encourage the notion that Google always gets it right. It does seem somewhat of an enigma.

Brendan Newnam decided to find out why it still hangs around. One interesting finding in his article comes from Tom Chavez, the head of Rapt, a company that helps determine what advertising real estate on a Web page is worth. He did the math on how much the 1% of people who use the button are costing the company. Google makes a lot of its money by selling ads on its search results page. People who are “feeling lucky” never see such a page and therefore Google’s ads. The “I’m Feeling Lucky” button automatically directs them to a non-Google web page. He estimates that Google loses $110 million of revenue per year by leaving the button for this 1% of visitors.

That’s a huge loss for a button that no one seems able to defend.

Related: I’m Feeling Lucky – Thanks, Google

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