Archive for category SEO – Google

Importing Your Blogger or WordPress.com Blog into WordPress

In a previous post, I discussed the SEO implications of choosing where to host your blog — in a subdomain, separate domain, external blog service or subdirectory. My conclusion, was that hosting your blog in a subdirectory of your primary domain provided the best SEO benefits.

Moving Your Blog to WordPress

So you've installed WordPress in a subdirectory of your primary domain. However, you already have an established blog on an external service such as Blogger or WordPress.com, with many posts and many images. What is the easiest way to move that blog to your new self-hosted WordPress blog? Both of the aforementioned services offer the ability to export your blog posts and comments, and your installed copy of WordPress has a "tool" for importing an external blog.

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Optimizing Your Website for Microsoft's Bing Search Engine

bing-logoMicrosoft's new search engine, Bing, has done quite well out of the gate, gaining 3% market share in June 2009. And from this Mashable post we learn that analytics and research firm StatCounter reports the July results are showing the same trend: Bing is gaining traction, having gained 1.24% market share, up to 9.41%. In June, Bing's increased market share came at the expense of Yahoo!, but in July it seems that 1% of the increase came at the expense of Google. According to StatCounter, Yahoo and Bing combined now control more than 20% of the search market, up from 19.27%, although comScore indicates that their combined market share in June was 29%, indicating disagreement over the actual numbers.

With this increased and growing market share, the fact that Yahoo! search will be taken over by Bing, and because Bing's search algorithms differ from Google's, SEOs will have to factor Microsoft/Bing into their approach to optimizing Web pages. The question is, How? Read the rest of this entry »

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Spezify - the Latest Entry in the Search Engine Arena

Although Google sits atop the search engine heap with a commanding 60%+ of market share, there continues to be a steady stream of new contenders looking for a way to conduct searches and/or present search results in some novel way that might catch on with users and begin to chip away at Google's hegemony.

The name of the game is Semantic Search, which is often described as the most salient characteristic of the not-quite-here-yet Web 3.0. Semantic searches support "natural language" queries, as opposed to keyword queries. It is a vision of information that is understandable by computers, so that they can perform more of the tedious work involved in finding, sharing, and combining information on the Web.

This is certainly a viable strategy, as long as the novelty creates a useful and user-friendly service that somehow enhances or augments what is offered by Google's search.

Two of the following three recent entries into the search field — Microsoft's Bing and Wolfram|Alpha — are positioning themselves as natural-language search engines, although Wolfram|Alpha is much more the real deal than is Bing which basically bolted on some features of Powerset to provide a bit of semantic search although it really just pulls from Wikipedia.

logo_bingBilled as a "decision engine," Bing, which became available to the public on May 28, 2009, presents search results in a visually organized manner that has garnered it some positive reviews. Its graphics-dominated home page --  the very antithesis of Google's clean no-BS look -- is to my taste a bit, um, overcooked and visually unappealing (very 1990s --  hard to imagine how it got approved!), but the search results are organized well and, thankfully, the SERPs are much cleaner in presentation. However, in terms of relevant search results, the consensus seems to be that Google still rules. However, Bing did quickly double Microsoft's search marketshare in its first couple weeks, so it'll be interesting to see how it fairs as its results and features improve and evolve and after its novelty fades.

logo_wolframAnother recent search engine is Wolfram|Alpha which bills itself as a "computational knowledge engine" and was rolled out to the public on May 15, 2009. Based on the work of Stephen Wolfram, Wolfram|Alpha is not, as a ReadWriteWeb Blog posts warns, a general purpose search engine. As the Wikipedia entry describes it

It is an online service that answers factual queries directly by computing the answer from structured data, rather than providing a list of documents or web pages that might contain the answer as a search engine might.

And this article describes it:

Search engines still matter, but Wolfram Alpha (www.wolframalpha.com) hopes to shift us toward a "finding engine" that uses Web 3.0 principles to deliver information from natural language queries. Wolfram Alpha is the latest big project from Wolfram Research, Inc. Marketed as a computational knowledge engine, it boils down to being a really smart way to access most of the best reference shelves on the planet. Think about it as a library minus the disdain for skateboarders plus Wolfram's Mathematica program powering the world's biggest online scientific calculator.

Wolfram|Alpha's strength is in the computation area — excelling in information that can be packed into data snippets (height of a mountain, chemical formulas, population stats, stars, planets, etc.): math problems, word puzzles, statistics. But a "Google Killer" it's not, and really doesn't purport to be.

logo_spezifySpezify is a new search engine with a unique graphical interface, and driven by Flash, that has just come out of beta, as of June 15, 2009.

I did some searches on Spezify and I have to admit that the presentation of "hits" is quite unique, with different sources (MSN Live search, Yahoo, Amazon, Twitter and Ebay, Facebook, Linkedin, etc.) aggregated and each source represented by a different graphic.  For instance, Twitter results are represented by a speech bubble, and other sources are branded in the top left with their logo/icon.

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Google's Wonder Wheel - Search Concept Mapping

Google has just rolled out some new features recently and the standout, from a wow-factor POV, has to be Wonder Wheel which displays search results as a series of spoked hubs, with the search term in the hub and related terms at the tip of each spoke.

Just do a Google search on, say, Thomas Pynchon. You will see the results displayed. Click on the "show options" link just beneath the Google logo.

google-wonder-wheel-0

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