Cosmetic Changes at Google Precede Larger Overhaul
By Jim Hedger, StepForth News Editor, StepForth Placement Inc. (c)
2005
Google is undergoing some of the most sweeping
changes in its short, seven year history. As of next week, Google
will have finished sorting what might be its largest algorithm shift
ever as the final points of the 3.5 part Bourbon Update (http://www.webpronews.com/insidesearch/insidesearch/
wpn-56-20050607LastRoundOfTheGoogleBourbonUpdateFinishingUp.html)
were installed last Monday. This update has been staggered into
three and a half sections in order to avoid a massive amount of
dislocation in established rankings as was seen in previous major
updates. While changes stemming from the Bourbon Update have not
actually manifested into a full reordering of Google's search engine
results pages (SERPs), many individual webmasters have reported
fairly significant losses or gains in ranking over the past few
days.
There are dozens of factors behind changes at Google
but the greatest is the enormous valuation of the company itself.
With share prices nearing the $300 mark and current market capitalization
topping $80 billion, Google is considered the most valuable media
company in the world, surpassing the $78 billion value of Time-Warner
and rising far above Yahoo's estimated value of $56 billion. Most
of Google's riches are newly found, having been generated after
their August 2004 IPO. In their race to outlast, outperform and
outsmart their competitors, Google has changed its PR strategy and
its appearance to suit the legions of suits swirling in and out
of their Mountain View offices.
While money may move mountains, it takes a community
to change an institution. The search environment has changed substantially
over the past three years and in that time, every major player in
the search sector has changed as well. Today, Google has become
a lot more complicated, so much so that it has stopped trying to
look simple. This change in corporate attitude is best reflected
in two places, the homepage and the About Google section.
Google's homepage used to be quite simple. Recently,
Google created a personalized portal interface google.com/ig (http://www.google.com/ig)
offering users instant access to several of these new features.
For folks with Google accounts such as Gmail users, subscribers
to Google Groups, Google desktop users and other account holders,
personalized versions of the once sparse homepage now presents instant
entry points to the various applications the individual uses. Many
industry observers have suggested Google's adoption of so many new
features and an all-in-one interface show they are moving towards
presenting themselves as more of a portal like Yahoo or MSN. Google
has always been a bit different than its competition. Even when
borrowing and innovating on competitors' ideas, Google has, until
now at least, managed to keep itself at an arm's length from the
mainstream in appearance and operation. The maintenance of that
image gave Internet users an alternative view of Google, one that
propelled Google to a position of almost total dominance of the
search engine sector. While that dominance might have slipped over
the past year, Google is still the most popular search appliance
in the world.
One of the ways Google has acted differently than
others is in the appearance of not taking itself too seriously.
Its corporate ethics policy was limited to the three word phrase,
"Don't be evil". Its front page interface retains the
double-entendre induced "I feel lucky" button, even though
the button is rarely used. The prospectus issued during their August
2004 IPO was specifically written to appear idealistically anti-corporate.
Since its introduction, Google has practiced projecting a simple,
youthful image that required very little in the way of explanation,
so long as their search engine lived up to users' expectations.
Google strives to live up to user expectations
and, for the most part, has met and exceeded them time and time
again. There is one long-held expectation that Google may not be
able to live up to any longer though. Many of us assume Google's
relatively informal public attitude will continue to carry over
into the later part of the decade. It won't. By comparison, Google
will almost certainly continue to be perceived as the search engine
driven by youthful energy. Whenever competitors such as MSN or Yahoo
try to appear as down-to-Earth as Google does, their efforts seem
obvious and forced. Does anyone remember that poor-fellow in the
butterfly suit wandering aimlessly around New York last year? Google's
communication style is maturing and the best place to view these
changes is on the About Google section of their site.
Google has published information about itself on
pages found behind the "About Google" (http://www.google.com/about.html)
link for several years. While documents found in the About section
have never been totally static, a facelift over the past few weeks
has radically altered the look and feel of the section. Along with
the traditional organic search engine results and highly targeted
paid-ads, Google is actually a series of 30-someodd search-based
applications ranging from alerts and answers to wireless search
and weather information. Driven in part by an inventive entrepreneurial
spirit and in part by a desire to keep up with products offered
by competitors, Google has been rapidly adding new features and
tools to their core search service for the past three years.
Google's About Google page was once much smaller
than it is today. It has grown slightly larger every time Google
adds another offering to it. The biggest changes are found behind
the increasing number of links on the About page. Today's version
of the About page has five boxes added to the left hand side of
the page advertising Google Desktop (http://desktop.google.com/enterprise/?promo=app-gdsfe-us-v1-1),
Blogger (http://googleblog.blogspot.com/), Google Code (http://code.google.com/),
Google Mobile (http://mobile.google.com/), and My Search History
(https://www.google.com/searchhistory/login). In the center column,
Google continues to show four main site sections labeled, Our Search,
For Site Owners, Our Company, and More Google. Collectively, those
sections contain a larger number of links than they did previously
and the number of documents found behind those links has grown as
well. Serious Google users should take an hour or two to tour these
changes and learn more about the staggering range of features, services
and search-enhancements Google now offers.
For webmasters and SEOs, an examination of the
new Google Webmaster Guidelines is a definite must. Google has recently
changed its webmaster guidelines which are also considered to be
a primer on "ethical SEO" practices in relation to Google
placements. Google has recently updated its webmaster guidelines
to include information on "supplemental listings", crawling
frequencies and prefetching. Google has also posted information
on its new Google Sitemaps (https://www.google.com/webmasters/sitemaps/docs/en/about.html)
experiment.
Google Sitemaps is perhaps the most important new
feature for SEOs offered by Google in a long time. Said to be an
experiment in spidering, Google Sitemaps invites webmasters to feed
site data directly to Google through an XML sitemap page. Webmasters
and SEOs can now tell Google exactly which sections of their sites
to crawl, and providing they are keeping their XML sitemap current,
when and where to look for changes to their sites. This experimental
initiative will especially help webmasters working with database
driven sites or large Ecommerce sites where documents are subject
to frequent change and are often found behind long-string URLs.
Google has been kind enough to provide detailed information on establishing
an XML feed and setting priorities for Googlebot.
As it grows, Google appears to be running into
the same problem other webmasters with numerous sites or services
encounter, the rapid dilution of a domain's unique topic focus.
In order to keep themselves accessible, understandable and relevant,
Google's teams of engineers, programmers and public relations specialists
are involved in what appears to be a massive overhaul of the interface,
public documents and the basic sorting algorithm that produces organic
results. As in previous years, how this all plays out in the end
is entirely up to the searching public. From the SEO/SEM perspective,
it is a good thing Google is in the midst of this update. Web workers
have been demanding a greater degree of transparency from Google
for some time now and perhaps these updates are the beginning of
a new commitment to communication from the Googleplex.
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Jim Hedger is a writer, speaker and search engine marketing expert
based in Victoria BC. Jim writes and edits full-time for StepForth.
He has worked as an SEO for over 5 years and welcomes the opportunity
to share his experience through interviews, articles and speaking
engagements. He can be reached at: jimhedger@stepforth.com
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