What’s Google Got In Store for 2014? Part One

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McCord Web Services is a Google Partner.

Getting or keeping search placement on Google is a fulltime job! In a wonderful and insightful review of what Google has in store for 2014 by Dr. Peter Myers for the Moz Blog in an article titled “Future SERP: a Glimpse at Google 2014” you’ll learn what he thinks Google has in store. I have to say I think that this is one of the very best articles I have read about what Google is doing.

Here are a few tidbits from the article interspersed with my own insights .

1. Google is focused on mobile. With smartphone use way up, Google’s got to find a way to monetize mobile to continue to build profits. As the mobile user reacts with search differently on their device than when using a desktop, Google is doing strong testing to identify what works and is relevant to mobile users. Expect to see the things that are being tested in mobile move to the desktop arena in the near future. For clients, this means location specificity in your content and on your website pages is very important as are location extension use in Google AdWords. Having a mobile responsive designed website is also becoming important.

2. Google is expanding the Knowledge Graph using more informational topical content from authoritative website in their organic search results to answer search questions. Questions about topics cover about 10% of all Google searches. This allows for wonderful opportunity for your own content to place in Google when you write a blog post or have content on your website that helps to education or answer a question.

3. Google is testing new ad formats that blur the line between organic and paid ads. If you’ve searched recently with your smartphone, you’ve seen some of these new formats. Some are colored the same as the organic results with a small goldenrod colored ad box in front, others are interspersed within the actual organic results. No longer are ads on mobile necessarily at the top of bottom of the page.  It is very important to know that this testing is mainly happening on mobile right now, but will move to the desktop when vetted. One of the big reasons for interspersing ads into the organic results, especially for mobile, is that there are only two ad slots using the old format for mobile – but there are more advertisers!

Visit our post on Wednesday November 20th for part two in this series.

Google is Focused on Mobile Search Are You Making It Important?

What Google considers important, you’d better take seriously especially if you want to place in Google’s search results without having to pay to play. What Google is considering very important at this point in time is fully embracing mobile. And not just mobile advertising, but a whole range of mobile options:

  • Mobile advertising using Google AdWords
  • Responsive website design – smartphone viewing capability
  • Location specificity in your content
  • Pricing strategies to combat showrooming

To fully understand Google’s focus on the mobile space, make sure to review Google’s new Mobile Playbook.

Not only does Google consider the implementation of showing your AdWords ads in the mobile space important, but it considers having a mobile responsive website important to place organically. This brave new world of a multi platform dimension is a whole new mind set and a revolutionary way to integrate your users web experience across multiple devices.

As Google states “Mobile changes everything.”  The Mobile Playbook will help you to understand the value of mobile customers so that you can address your content strategy, in-store pricing strategies, and implement new advertising strategies as well as tips such as creating exclusive product lines to prevent price shopping. Google provides an excellent road map with case studies for the forward thinking executive’s review to help them understand that for Google, mobile is a game changer.

How to Opt Out of Google’s Shared Endorsements

I am not sure why we have to go down this path again, but we do. However this time it is not Facebook or Twitter that is using your name and face to sell services, but Google!

Plastered all over the home page of Google.com is a blue bar letting you know that in November Google will be starting to use any Google+ user’s information on +1’s, reviews, and comments in advertising around the Web to other people in your circle. Google calls this new brand of advertising Shared Endorsements.

For now, this really only impacts users who are on Google+, but I would not be surprised if eventually this will impact all users of Google. If you don’t want to share what you do and like in this way with others, you can opt out of this new program, and here’s how:

1. Visit this Google Page: https://plus.google.com/settings/endorsements?hl=en&partnerid=gplp0 you will need to login to your Google account.

2. Go to the bottom of the page where it says “Based upon my activity, Google may show my name and profile photo in shared endorsements that appear in ads.” and remove the check mark from the box. If there was no check mark you are fine.

3. Make sure to click save. Google will pull up a comment asking you “are you sure you want to do this?” click “yes” and you are good to go.

Facebook took a huge black eye months ago when it rolled out it’s own version of Endorsement Ads when it revealed what people had bought in ads embarrassing users who maybe did not want others to know that they had bought certain items. Why Google has decided to go down this same path, one can only guess.

I for one have already removed my name and I encourage you to do so too. We already share so much online I don’t want my name and image to hawk products to others I may know.

Google’s Hummingbird Algorithm Explained

Affecting over 92% of all searches the new Google algorithm called Hummingbird was released about two weeks ago. Some website saw no change in placement and the placement of other websites was significantly impacted.

What does the Hummingbird update really impact?

First, this is a large change to how Google ranks websites. No longer is there a focus on the keywords on the page or keyword density but rather a refocus on “understanding” what a search query means and delivering the best page that addresses the intention of the searcher.

This is a huge technology shift in how Google delivers search results. With many of the technology changes Google has made this last year, Google now is able to measure user intent in each search query. By checking device, location, and search query history, Google now understands better what a user wants to see in the search results.

How does this impact website owners?

First and foremost website owners need to understand that Google is not looking for keyword density or to be spoon-fed keyword phrases. Google now understand a concept on your website page based on the phrases used and the meaning. Additionally by reviewing signals of co-citation and social media sharing Google understands which website pages and websites have the best content for the user’s unique query based on their intent and location.

The bottom line is that the ability to control Google to show your website or page in the search results in a higher position has become nearly impossible. The focus for website owners instead should be to create the most relevant website for their own audience with a strong focus on location specificity.

For national selling firms this means that location should be mentioned and not masked, but that this new geo-location bias will continue to have a negative impact on their performance; driving new advertisers into Google AdWords.

For additional information on how unique the Google Hummingbird algorithm is for Google, I recommend a careful review of this very interesting article called “Google’s Hummingbird Takes Flight: SEOs Give Insight On Google’s New Algorithm” from Search Engine Land.