Google Adwords Archives | Offshore Web Development Services India - Brain Technosys https://www.braintechnosys.com/blog/category/google-adwords/ Mon, 30 Apr 2018 05:41:46 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://www.braintechnosys.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/cropped-logo-32x32.png Google Adwords Archives | Offshore Web Development Services India - Brain Technosys https://www.braintechnosys.com/blog/category/google-adwords/ 32 32 It’s Over: The Rise & Fall Of Google Authorship For Search Results https://www.braintechnosys.com/blog/its-over-the-rise-fall-of-google-authorship-for-search-results/ Fri, 29 Aug 2014 11:28:33 +0000 http://braintechnosys.net/braintech/blog/?p=6456 Google has completely dropped all authorship functionality from the search results and webmaster tools. After three years the great Google Authorship experiment has come to an end … at least for now. Today John Mueller of Google Webmaster Tools announced in a Google+ post that Google will stop showing authorship results in Google Search, and … Continue reading "It’s Over: The Rise & Fall Of Google Authorship For Search Results"

The post It’s Over: The Rise & Fall Of Google Authorship For Search Results appeared first on Offshore Web Development Services India - Brain Technosys.

]]>
Google has completely dropped all authorship functionality from the search results and webmaster tools.

After three years the great Google Authorship experiment has come to an end … at least for now.

Today John Mueller of Google Webmaster Tools announced in a Google+ post that Google will stop showing authorship results in Google Search, and will no longer be tracking data from content using rel=author markup.

This in-depth article, which I’ve jointly co-written with Mark Traphagen, will cover the announcement of the end of Authorship, the history of Authorship, a study conducted by Stone Temple Consulting that confirms one of the stated reasons for cessation of the program, and some thoughts about the future of author authority in search.

Authorship’s Gradual Slide Toward Extinction

The cessation of the Authorship program comes after two major reductions of Authorship rich snippets over the past eight months. In December 2013 Google reduced the amount of author photo snippets shown per query, as Google’s webspam head Matt Cutts had promised would happen in his keynote at Pubcon that October. Starting in December, only some Authorship results were accompanied by an author photo, while all others had just a byline.

Then at the end of June 2014 Google removed all author photos from global search, leaving just bylines for any qualified authorship results.

At that time, John Mueller in a Google+ post stated that the photos were removed because Google was moving toward unifying the user experience between desktop and mobile search, and author photos did not work well with the limited screen space and bandwidth of mobile. He also remarked that Google was seeing no significant difference in “click behavior” between search pages with or without author photos.

A Brief History of Google Authorship

The roots of the Authorship project go back to Google’s Agent Rank patent of 2007. As explained by Bill Slawski, an expert on Google’s patents, the Agent Rank patent described a system for connecting multiple pieces of content with a digital signature representing one or more “agents” (authors).

Such identification could then be used to score the agent based on various trust and authority signals pointing at the agent’s content, and that score could be used to influence search rankings.

Agent Rank remained a theoretical idea without a practical means of application, until the adoption by Google of the schema.org standards for structured markup. In a blog post in June 2011, Google announced that it would begin to support authorship markup. The company encouraged webmasters to begin marking up content on their sites with the rel=”author” and rel=”me” tags, connecting each piece of content to an author profile.

The final puzzle piece for Authorship to be truly useful to Google fell into place with the unveiling of Google+ at the end of June 2011. Google+ profiles could now serve as Google’s universal identity platform for connecting authors with their content.

In a YouTube video published in August of that year, Matt Cutts and then head of the Authorship project Othar Hansson gave explicit instructions on how authors should connect their content with their Google+ profiles, noted that doing so could cause one’s profile photo to show in search results, and for the first time mentioned that — at some future time — data from Authorship could be used as a ranking factor.

Over the next three years, Authorship in search went through many changes that we won’t detail here (although Ann Smarty has compiled a complete history of those changes). On repeated occasions, though, Matt Cutts and other Google spokespeople reiterated a long-term commitment by Google to the concept of author authority.

Why Has Google Ended the Authorship Program?

Over its entire history Google has repeatedly demonstrated that nothing it creates is sacred or immortal. The list of Google products and services that were introduced only to be unceremoniously discontinued later would fill a small phone book.

The primary reason behind this shuffle of products is Google’s unswerving commitment to testing. Every product, and every change or innovation within each product, is constantly tested and evaluated. Anything that the data show as not meeting Google’s goals, not having sufficient user adoption, or not providing significant user value, will get the axe.

John Mueller told my co-author Mark that test data collected from three years of Google Authorship convinced Google that showing Authorship results in search was not returning enough value compared to the resources it took to process the data.

Mueller gave two specific areas in which the Authorship experiment fell short of expectations:

1. Low adoption rates by authors and webmasters. As our study data later in this article will confirm, participation in authorship markup was spotty at best, and almost non-existent in many verticals. Even when sites attempted to participate, they often did it incorrectly. In addition, most non-tech-savvy site owners or authors felt the markup and linking were too complex, and so were unlikely to try to implement it.

Because of these problems, beginning in early 2012, Google started attempting to auto-attribute authorship in some cases where there was no or improper markup, or no link from an author profile. In a November 2012 study of a Forbes list of 50 Most Influential Social Media Marketers, Mark found that only 30% used authorship markup on their own blogs, but of those without any markup, 34% were still getting an Authorship rich snippet in search. This is similar to data found in a study performed by Eric which is further detailed below.

However, Google’s attempts at auto-attribution of authors led to many well-publicized cases of mis-attribution, such as Truman Capote being shown as the author of a New York Times article 28 years after his death. Clearly, Google’s hopes of being able to identify the web’s authors, connect them with their content, and then evaluate their trust and authority levels as possible ranking factors was in trouble if it was going to depend on the cooperation of non-Google people.

2. Low value to searchers. In his announcement of the elimination of author photos from global search in late June of this year, John Mueller stated that Google was seeing little difference in “click behavior” on search result pages with Authorship snippets compared to those without. This came as a shock (accompanied in many cases with outright disbelief) to those who had always believed that author snippets brought higher click-through rates.

Mueller repeated in his conversation with Mark about today’s change that Google’s data showed users were not getting sufficient value from Authorship snippets. While he did not elaborate on what he meant by “value” we might speculate that this could mean that overall, in aggregate, user behavior on a search page did not seem to be affected by the presence of author snippets. Perhaps over time users had become used to seeing them and they lost their novelty.

It is interesting to note that (as of the time of this posting) author photos continue to appear for Google+ content from people a searcher has in his or her Google network (Google+ circles or Gmail contacts) when the searcher is logged in to her or his Google+ account (personalized search).

When asked, Mueller said he had no knowledge of any plans to stop showing those types of results. However, some users have reported to Mark that they are no longer seeing them. We will watch this development and update here if it looks like Google is indeed removing author photos from personalized results as well.

If Google does continue to show author photos in some personalized results, it would seem to indicate that Google data is showing that when content is from someone with whom the searcher has some personal association, a rich snippet actually does provide value to that searcher. More about this in our final section below.

Study of Rel=Author Implementations
As luck would have it, Stone Temple Consulting was in the process of wrapping up a study on rel=author markup usage. A look at the data illustrates part of the problem that Google faces with an initiative like this one. The bottom line of what we found? Adoption was weak, and accurate implementation among those that attempted to set up rel=author was also bad. If that was not enough, the adoption by authors was also bad. So let’s look at the numbers!

Authorship Adoption

We sampled 500 authors across 150 different major media web sites. Here is a summary of what we saw for their implementation of authorship tagging in their Google+ profiles:

A whopping 70% of authors made no attempt to connect their authorship with the content they were publishing on major web sites. Of course, this has much to do with how Google attempts to promote these types of initiatives. In short, they don’t. They rely on the organic spread of information throughout the Interweb ecosystem, which is uneven at best.

Publisher Adoption

50 of the 150 sites did not have any author pages at all, and more than 3/4 of these provided no more than the author’s name for attribution. For the remaining batch, some of them would allow authors to include links with their attribution at the bottom of the article, but the great majority of these authors did not take advantage of the opportunity.

For today’s post, we also took 20 of the sites that had author pages, and analyzed in detail their success in implementing authorship:

13 of the 20 sites attempted to implement authorship markup (65%)
10 of these 13 attempts had errors (77%)
12 of the 13 attempts received rich snippets in the Google SERPs (92%)
The implementation style for authorship was all over the map. We found malformed tags, authorship implemented on site, but no link the the author’s G+ profile, conflicting tags reporting multiple people as the author for a given article, and one situation where an article had 2 named authors, but only the 2nd named author linked to their G+ profile, and Google gave the 2nd author credit for that article.

Seven of the 20 sites did not attempt to implement authorship markup (35%)
Two of these seven received rich snippets in the Google SERPs (28%)
In the two cases where Google provided the rich snippets even though there was no markup, the authors did link to the site from the Contributor To section of their G+ profile.

Summarizing the Study

In short, proper adoption of rel=author markup was extremely low. Google clearly went to extreme efforts to try and make the connection between author and publisher, even in the face of many challenges. From a broader perspective, this tells us quite a bit about the difficulties of obtaining data from publishers. It’s hard, and the quality of the information you will get is quite low.

Summary

Google has stated many times over the past three years its interest in understanding author authority. It’s hard to forget executive chairman Eric Schmidt’s powerful statements on the topic:

Within search results, information tied to verified online profiles will be ranked higher than content without such verification, which will result in most users naturally clicking on the top (verified) results. The true cost of remaining anonymous, then, might be irrelevance.
Eric Schmidt in The New Digital Age

However, this has proved to be a very tough problem to solve. The desire to get at this data is there, but the current approach simply did not work. As we noted above, this is one of the two big reasons why this initiative is being abandoned.

The other problem identified by John Mueller is equally important. The approach of including some form of rich snippet, be it a photo, or a simple byline, was not providing value to end users in the SERPs. Google is always relentlessly testing search quality, and there are no sacred cows. If Google is not seeing end users valuing something they try, out, it will go.

We also can’t ignore the impact of the processing power used for this effort. We all like to think that Google has infinite processing power. It doesn’t. If it did have such power, it would use optical character recognition to read text in images, image processing techniques to recognize pictures, speech to text technology to transcribe every video it encounters online, and it would crawl every page on the web every day, and so forth. But it doesn’t.

What this tells us is that Google has to make conscious decisions on how it spends its processing power — it must be budgeted wisely. As of this moment, the Authorship initiative as we have known it has not been deemed worthy of the budget it was consuming.

The rise of mobile may have played a role in this outcome as well. When John Mueller says staffers don’t see a significant difference in click behavior in the SERPs as a result of Authorship rich snippets, remember that about half of Google’s traffic comes from mobile devices now. Chewing up valuable screen real estate for this type of markup on a mobile device may simply be a bad idea.

So is authorship gone forever? Our guess is that probably is not. The concept is a good one. We buy into the notion that some people are smarter about certain topics than others. It’s the current attempts at figuring this out that have failed, not the concept.

As Google moves forward in its commitment to semantic search it has to develop ways to identify entities such as authors with a high degree of confidence apart from human actions such as markup. Recent announcements about Google’s Knowledge Vault project would seem to reinforce that Google is moving steadily in that direction. So this may be how it approaches detection.

If, and when, it makes use of such data, what will it look like? Don’t be surprised if the impact is too subtle to be easily noticed. We will probably not see author photos in the results ever again. Could we see some form of AuthorRank? Possibly, but it may come in a highly personalized form or get blended in with many other factors that make it detection virtually impossible.

So goodbye for now, Authorship. You were a grand and glorious experiment, and we will miss you, but we look forward to something even better for Authorship in the future.

Note– This article originally posted on Search Engine Land.

The post It’s Over: The Rise & Fall Of Google Authorship For Search Results appeared first on Offshore Web Development Services India - Brain Technosys.

]]>
The Future of Link Building: 5 Important Messages https://www.braintechnosys.com/blog/the-future-of-link-building-5-important-messages/ Mon, 14 Apr 2014 04:42:16 +0000 http://braintechnosys.net/braintech/blog/?p=5864 Best practices rapidly change within SEO as technologies (and Google’s guidelines) evolve. But one thing hasn’t changed: the importance of links. Obviously there are other fundamental concerns (e.g., indexation, crawlability, duplicate content, site architecture), but link acquisition needs to be an active consideration. Links are still the strongest signal we can give to Google about … Continue reading "The Future of Link Building: 5 Important Messages"

The post The Future of Link Building: 5 Important Messages appeared first on Offshore Web Development Services India - Brain Technosys.

]]>
Best practices rapidly change within SEO as technologies (and Google’s guidelines) evolve. But one thing hasn’t changed: the importance of links.

Obviously there are other fundamental concerns (e.g., indexation, crawlability, duplicate content, site architecture), but link acquisition needs to be an active consideration.

Links are still the strongest signal we can give to Google about the importance of our content and site. So, if you’re working to increase search visibility, links need to be a primary consideration.

The water is muddy right now though with Google’s war on spam links, and from what I’ve observed attending recent conferences I think a few messages need to be addressed within SEO:

  • Links are still the core of Google’s search algorithm.
  • Link building and content marketing are fundamentally different.
  • Content marketing is difficult to do well. SEO pros often don’t have the required skill set for high-level content creation.
  • Link building can supercharge your content marketing efforts.
  • You can still build links even if you don’t have great content.

1. Links are Still the Core of Google’s Search Algorithm

Links are still immensely powerful.

This is confirmed by:

1. Moz’s 2013 Search Engine Ranking Factors.

2. Amit Singhal, Google’s head of search.

But we’re all aware of Google’s recent crackdown on link building activities. We’re aware that MyBlogGuest didn’t really deserve the penalty, and that more realistically it was a PR move.

But because we represent real, legitimate companies who are looking to grow their online visibility long term, we need to make sure our strategies are safe, effective, and just as long term. This has led SEO professionals to search for new ways to ensure safe and powerful links are created.

Because links are still the core of Google’s search algorithm, and we all know it.

This has led many people who were previously doing SEO toward content marketing, with their primary concern being links.

2. Link Building and Content Marketing are Fundamentally Different

Let’s be honest: there are many right now who think that content marketing is the new link building, and have labeled it “link acquisition” or “link earning.”

But content marketing is not link building. Nor is it even SEO – there’s no guarantee that your content will be visible in search, nor is creating more content guaranteed to make your site more visible in search. And you’re certainly not going to get the links if you don’t do the work.

Content marketing is wholly different than link building or SEO. SEO is about increasing search visibility. Content marketing is about creating valuable content worth sharing.

You shouldn’t be approaching content marketing from a link building/SEO perspective – it’ll lead to terrible content, I guarantee it.

How often do we complain about yet another garbage blog post, infographic, roundup, whatever the current content flavor is? Content fatigue (and content shock) is a very real problem. We certainly see it more than most.

Your primary concern when building content should be providing value, furthering your brand message/values, and engaging with your target audience.

Sounds easy, but it’s really, really difficult.

3. Content Marketing is Difficult to do Well

SEO pros often don’t have the required skillset for high-level content creation.

Content creation potentially requires:

  • Industry experts
  • Writers
  • Editors
  • Designers
  • Technical (coders, web dev, app dev, etc.)

Content marketing requires the support of a host of people with diverse skills, including creative, technical, industry experts, graphic, etc. Without significant investment to ensure the content remains unique, valuable, and engaging, you’re simply wasting your time, money, and resources.

Thinking a single person can do all this work is daft. Thinking that those skilled at SEO naturally have all these skills is just as bad. Will some be able to make the transition? Sure. Will all? Definitely not, nor should they.

SEO pros don’t have to become content marketers.

4. Link Building Can Supercharge Your Content Marketing Efforts

Every content marketing campaign should involve SEO.

Creating amazing content isn’t enough – you still need to market it. SEO can help increase the visibility of content, especially if your team has a strong link building background.

SEO pros have the skill set to:

  • Find similar content and:
  • Find people and websites who have shared, mentioned, or linked previously.
  • Find people and websites who would be interested in sharing, mentioning, or linking.
  • Outreach persuasively to generate links, shares, and mentions.
  • Help determine future content ideas that have a high chance of success.
  • Ensure best practices for search are used on-page and on-site, within the content.
  • Leverage previous relationships and industry understanding (assuming they’ve worked in the niche before).
  • Advise paid options as well – most SEO folks are capable when it comes to both social media and PPC.

If you’re going to invest in content, you need to invest in visibility. Having an if-you-build-it-they-will-come attitude it today’s content era is ridiculous, considering the amount of content produced and the very real content fatigue happening online.

Without intelligent marketing you’re leaving valuable opportunities on the table. A good SEO can supercharge great content, promote decent content, and even salvage mediocre content.

5. You Can Still Build Links Even if You Don’t Have Great Content

Content marketing and link building are definitely compatible, and can create a marketing flywheel.

However, that doesn’t mean you have to be involved in content marketing to build links.

For many sites content marketing simply doesn’t make sense – either due to their size, target audience, culture, resources, or products. There is no one-size-fits-all online marketing solution. But there’s other ways to build good links that make sense.

Without content, you can build links using:

  • Fresh Mentions
  • Local links
  • HARO
  • Broken link building
  • Relevant niche or local directories
  • Contests
  • Reviews
  • Community engagement

Focus on the human value – build links that you would want even if Google didn’t exist. Build links that are for the betterment of mankind, and the web. Build links that you wouldn’t hesitate to show a friend, colleague, or even competitor.

Real link building has always been a creative endeavor, requiring added value. And content certainly isn’t the only way to add value to the web.

Note: This article original posted on Search Engine Watch.

The post The Future of Link Building: 5 Important Messages appeared first on Offshore Web Development Services India - Brain Technosys.

]]>
Google AdWords Adds Consumer Rating Annotations https://www.braintechnosys.com/blog/google-adwords-adds-consumer-rating-annotations/ Thu, 13 Mar 2014 09:34:20 +0000 http://braintechnosys.net/braintech/blog/?p=5806 You may already be familiar with Google’s Consumer Surveys. If you’ve been wondering what Google intends to do with the information it’s collecting from users about brands and their websites, we learned that one way Google is leveraging that data is through consumer rating annotations on Google AdWords. “Consumer ratings annotations highlight industry-specific ratings based … Continue reading "Google AdWords Adds Consumer Rating Annotations"

The post Google AdWords Adds Consumer Rating Annotations appeared first on Offshore Web Development Services India - Brain Technosys.

]]>
You may already be familiar with Google’s Consumer Surveys. If you’ve been wondering what Google intends to do with the information it’s collecting from users about brands and their websites, we learned that one way Google is leveraging that data is through consumer rating annotations on Google AdWords.

“Consumer ratings annotations highlight industry-specific ratings based on consumer surveys. Up to three of your best ratings show below the text of your search ads, along with a link to more ratings. These annotations—which need no setup—help drive website traffic with the power of consumer opinion,” AdWords said in its help files.

AdWords said it runs surveys through Google Consumer Surveys where “at least hundreds, and in most cases, over a thousand people are surveyed for each business,” and that respondents self-identify as customers.

“The surveys AdWords runs begin by finding out if respondents are customers of a particular business, using a question like ‘What airline have you flown with recently?’ or ‘Which mobile service provider do you use?’ Then, the surveys ask about experience with that Business.”

AdWords said it only shows “your business’s highest survey ratings, emphasizing the areas where your customers notice you’re doing a great job,” and that data gleaned from Google’s Consumer Surveys represents a more objective picture of a business because “people respond to Google Consumer Surveys in order to access web content that they’re interested in reading (on online news, reference, and entertainment sites), or to earn Google Play credit through an Android app. This means that you get feedback from a wide array of customers, rather than seeing disproportionate responses from people who are disgruntled (or thrilled).”

With consumer rating annotations, when people click on an ad’s rating, they can drill down into a more detailed view of rating scores.

Clicks on ratings and clicks on a business’s homepage from the survey details window are free, and aren’t reported in performance statistics, said AdWords.

The advertising platform also said the scoring system “is the same for every advertiser, regardless of the advertiser’s spending on AdWords or elsewhere on Google.”

Consumer ratings are specific to the country the ads are being shown in. “For example, people searching on google.co.uk will see ads with consumer ratings from U.K. brands only. Also, consumer ratings are available in English only, so people searching in other languages won’t see consumer ratings,” said AdWords.

Right now, there isn’t any setup needed, meaning this can start showing in your ads at any time. For more information or to opt in or out, check out this information from AdWords:

  • No setup needed: Consumer ratings are available for several hundred businesses in the U.S., U.K., and Canada, from surveys run by the AdWords team on the Google Consumer Surveys platform. If AdWords has ratings for your business, and predicts that showing ratings will be beneficial to your campaign, ratings show without any setup on your part.
  • If you need to opt out: When consumer ratings show, it’s likely that you’ll see a higher clickthrough rate. If you need to opt out of using consumer rating annotations, contact us.
  • Tell us you’re interested: You can submit a request if you’d like to show survey scores for your company. If survey scores aren’t yet available for you, you can still highlight glowing reviews by adding review extensions.

Note: This article original posted on Search Engine Watch.

The post Google AdWords Adds Consumer Rating Annotations appeared first on Offshore Web Development Services India - Brain Technosys.

]]>
AdWords Offer Extensions Get Shut Down In Favor Of Google Offers https://www.braintechnosys.com/blog/adwords-offer-extensions-get-shut-down-in-favor-of-google-offers/ Mon, 11 Nov 2013 09:19:36 +0000 http://braintechnosys.net/braintechnosys/?p=5296 In February, Google announced the limited release of AdWords Offer Extensions, which allowed advertisers to dedicate extra real estate in their search ads to promoting in-store coupons and discounts. Offer Extensions didn’t make much of a splash when they debuted, and now it turns out they were sunsetted on November 1st. Google posted the following alert … Continue reading "AdWords Offer Extensions Get Shut Down In Favor Of Google Offers"

The post AdWords Offer Extensions Get Shut Down In Favor Of Google Offers appeared first on Offshore Web Development Services India - Brain Technosys.

]]>
In February, Google announced the limited release of AdWords Offer Extensions, which allowed advertisers to dedicate extra real estate in their search ads to promoting in-store coupons and discounts. Offer Extensions didn’t make much of a splash when they debuted, and now it turns out they were sunsetted on November 1st.

Google posted the following alert on the support page for Offer Extensions:

  • Starting on November 1, 2013, we will no longer support offer extensions in AdWords. On that date, offer extensions will stop showing in your ads and offer extensions reporting will stop showing in your account. No action is required.
  • We recommend reviewing your campaigns to ensure your messaging continues to fit your goals. To retain offer extensions reporting for your records, remember to download campaign reports before November 1. Consider using sitelinks or Google offers to promote your deals and offers in the future.

I don’t know at this point when the alert was posted or if there was any other communication to advertisers using Offer extensions. However, on October 24, Google announced an updated self-service tool for US businesses to create Google Offers.  Consumers can save and redeem offers in-store with their smartphones.

Google Offers are distributed to users who are in proximity to the advertiser’s business through Google Maps, Google+, Google Wallet and the Google Offers app and web site. Though Offer Extensions didn’t catch on, it would seem there is still an opportunity for Google to incorporate Google Offers into search ads.

Hat tip to David Szetela of FMB Media.

This article originally posted on searchengineland.com

The post AdWords Offer Extensions Get Shut Down In Favor Of Google Offers appeared first on Offshore Web Development Services India - Brain Technosys.

]]>