Comments Off

by Simon Heseltine

When deciding where to build your bricks and mortar store, one of the main determinants is the neighborhood. If you’re a toy shop, or other type of store catering to kids, you don’t want to go in next to the ‘adult novelty’ store, or the strip club. After all, your neighborhood sets the tone for the type of clientele that you can expect to enter your establishment.

What about online? If you’re not hosting your site yourself, then chances are you’re going with a hosting company that’s going to throw you in with several hundred other sites, a neighborhood that you have no control over. This neighborhood can affect your business. Looking at the example below, you can see my blog has another 528 sites identified as being on the same server. Out of those 528 sites two are labeled as potentially being adult oriented.

What could that mean to me, or to your business were you to see the same thing? There exists the possibility that if filters detect this issue, and decide that it really is a bad neighborhood that they’ll put a block on that particular IP address, which impacts every decent site on that server, yours and mine included. Of course, there also exists the chance that someone on that server will send out spam emails, which are then identified as such, thus filtering email from every site on that server.

Unlike a brick and mortar store, when your neighbor gets lots of visitors, you don’t get any spillover in an online world. In fact, a site that generates large amounts of traffic can take down the server, and in this case 528 other sites at the same time. Not what I’d call a good neighbor.

So what can you do about it? Well, the simplest solution is to go the dedicated server route, that way you don’t have to worry about the neighborhood. Of course, then the dual issues of expense and maintenance rear their head. The latter can be removed by using a hosting company that provides dedicated servers, and letting them take care of maintenance. If cost is an issue ($380+ per month verses $7 per month), you can form your own little neighborhood watch committee and keep an eye on what’s happening on your server. Go to You Got Signal to generate a neighborhood map like the one above, and go to DNSstuff to see if your IP is blacklisted as a source of spam. If you start to see ‘bad’ sites show up, contact your hosting company, and let them know about your concerns. In most cases they’d rather get rid of the spammy site and lose $7 worth of monthly revenue than upset the other $3696 worth.

Want more from your web site?
Search Influence can help! Targeted Traffic. Increased Revenue. Results Guaranteed. Customized Internet Marketing you can afford.

Comments Off

Here is a recap of what happened in the search forums today, through the eyes of the Search Engine Roundtable and other search forums on the web.

Comments Off

Here is a recap of what happened in the search forums today, through the eyes of the Search Engine Roundtable and other search forums on the web.

Comments Off

Below is what happened in search today, as reported on
Search Engine Land and from other
places across the web

From Search Engine Land:


  • Yahoo Displaying Geo Criteria Of Search Ads

    The BrandVerity Blog noticed that Yahoo started displaying the business’s location under the search ads. For example, a search on lawyers in Yahoo returns several ads that display New York under them. Why New York? Because I am based in New York. If you are located in California, you might…

  • Twitter Beats (Wow, By 3 Minutes) The USGS With China Earthquake News

    Hey, I like Twitter, but this entire thing Robert Scoble started about how Twitter had news of the Chinese earthquake before the US Geological Survey seemed absurd. Did it really? As it turns out, probably so — by about three minutes. Reading some of the accounts, you’d get the impression…

  • Small, Local Businesses Taking Economic Downturn in Stride

    The economic downturn is a reality, but the specific ways that it affects businesses run the gamut based on the size and type of business. During these times, small, local businesses often feel the pinch more quickly and sharply, causing some to take evasive maneuvers to keep afloat. Based on…

  • Google Introduces “FriendConnect” Social Widgets For Site Owners

    Contrary to some earlier reports, Google’s new FriendConnect, launching today, is not focused on data portability or a direct answer to MySpace “Data Availability” or the new Facebook Connect. While there’s a data portability dimension, it’s focused on the flip side of the equation: site owners who want to make…

  • Yahoo Search Ambassador Program Closing

    The Search Engine Roundtable reports that it seems to be no longer possible to sign up for the Ambassador Program. Although there is no specific confirmation from Yahoo on that on the Ambassador program page, when one tries to sign up via an affiliate site, we get a notice that…

  • Cast Your Vote For Doodle 4 Google Contestants

    You can now cast your vote for the Doodle 4 Google competition at google.com/doodle4google/vote.html. Again, the winning doodle will be showcased on the Google home page on May 22, 2008 and the winner also gets a $10,000 college scholarship and a $25,000 technology grant for his/her school. To vote, go…

  • Yahoo Labels Google As Malware? No, Yahoo URL Mix Up

    Google Is A Malware Site (Says Yahoo) from TechCrunch reports a funny bug at Yahoo, that accidently made it look like Google’s home page had Malware on it, based on the Yahoo SearchScan feature that was recently launched. A search for Astalavista at Yahoo returned, what appeared to be a…

  • Powerset Launches “Understanding Engine” For Wikipedia Content

    After nearly two years in the making — and plenty of hype — Powerset has finally rolled out a "natural language" search engine. It’s not a Google killer. It’s barely a business model right now. But at least it’s something the world can finally play with, and under the hood,…

  • SnapStream Brings The “Power Of Search” To Television Programming

    Imagine TiVo on steroids combined with a search engine like Google. It exists today but for the enterprise market. That product is called SnapStream TV and it allows thousands of hours of programming to be recorded – up to 10 shows simultaneously – and then, using closed caption transcripts, brings…

Search News From Around The Web:

Applications & Portal Features

Business Issues

Local, Maps & Mobile

Link Building

Paid Search & Contextual

Searching

SEM Industry

SEO & SEM

Social Media

Video, Music & Image Search

Other Items

Recent Hot Items From Sphinn, Our Social News Sharing Site:

Comments Off

The BrandVerity Blog noticed that Yahoo started displaying the business’s location under the search ads. For example, a search on lawyers in Yahoo returns several ads that display New York under them. Why New York? Because I am based in New York. If you are located in California, you might see California labeled under the ads.

Here is a screen capture:
Yahoo Showing Geo Location on Ads

Click to continue reading…

Comments Off

The BrandVerity Blog noticed that Yahoo started displaying the business’s location under the search ads. For example, a search on lawyers in Yahoo returns several ads that display New York under them. Why New York? Because I am based in New York. If you are located in California, you might see California labeled under the ads.

Here is a screen capture:
Yahoo Showing Geo Location on Ads

Click to continue reading…

Comments Off

by Jennifer Laycock

With so much focus on social media and fostering conversation these days, companies both big and small are trying to figure out the best way to grow communities. Looking around at the number of blogs dedicated to the topic, you’d think there was some complex formula you needed to follow to get one going. Of course George Oates from Flickr would tell you you’re wrong.

In a great post over at A List Apart last week, Oates walked readers through the growth of Flickr and how the team behind the site worked (or didn’t) to foster it.

Oates lays it out like this:

People don’t like being told what to do. We like to explore, change things around, and make a place our own. Hefty design challenges await the makers of websites where people feel free to engage; both with the system itself and with each other. Embrace the idea that people will warp and stretch your site in ways you can’t predict–they’ll surprise you with their creativity and make something wonderful with what you provide.

At Flickr, we’ve worked very hard to remain neutral while our members jostle and collide and talk and whisper to each other. Sharing photos is practically a side-effect. Our members have thrilled and challenged us–not just with their beautiful photography, but by showing us how to use our infrastructure in ways we could have never imagined.

At the heart of Oates’ article is the reminder that you can’t “control” social media. You can offer up the tools and the environment to allow people to congregate and communicate, but you can’t try to force them to fit your own ideas of how that communication should take place. Granted, you don’t want mass pandemonium or anarchy…there do have to be limits in terms of spam, stalking and the using the community to hock your wares. Oates and company have handled that in their own way as well:

We needed a way to represent the culture of the place. So, as I sat on a train for several mornings with Heather Champ, Flickr’s very own community manager, we tossed back and forth The Thirteen-Or-So Commandments. Of course, they weren’t actually commandments, but rather guidelines that we wanted all our new members to at least skim. My personal favorite–”Don’t Be Creepy: You know the guy. Don’t be that guy.”–is something a lawyer would never write, and yet it speaks volumes.

In Flickr’s case, they were building a community of their own. In a small businesses’ case, they’ll likely be building conversation via a blog, or hoping to foster community on another site or forum. Either way, the advice and insight from Oates’ article applies. You can’t shape the conversation online, you can only encourage it…and the best way to encourage it is to provide the tools and let the conversation itself come from the community.

Want more from your web site?
Search Influence can help! Targeted Traffic. Increased Revenue. Results Guaranteed. Customized Internet Marketing you can afford.

Comments Off

by Scott Buresh

Roughly a year ago, local search engine optimization was all the rage - the new frontier in search engine marketing. For a while, it seemed that everyone was interested in the local search angle - even multi-national companies. However, for many companies selling products or services to the entire United States, or even globally, it seemed like a non-starter. Companies that counted on people looking for certain products or services that did not require close proximity to the company’s location were unaffected. As far as local search engine optimization goes, things have changed a bit since then - at least for some.

Some time ago, Google introduced a “geographic box” at the top of its search results. This is tied in to its mapping feature, and, when it was first introduced, the engine would display three results at the top of its search results whenever somebody entered a geographic modifier into the search box (”Atlanta widgets,” for example). The Google algorithm then has the intelligence to determine whether the query calls for results that are primarily local in scope.

Since that initial trial, Google has obviously found that its users appreciate the feature. The engine now displays ten local search results at the top of the listings for certain queries, provided that they have a geographic modifier attached. For example, if you type in “Atlanta gyms” in Google, you will see ten results alongside a map that shows the location of ten gyms in Atlanta.

It should be noted that you will not see local search results for all queries that contain a local modifier. In certain instances, it almost seems as if Google somehow “knows” when a geographic modifier really means that you only offer services in a particular area. Yeah, those guys are pretty good.

There are many resources on the Internet to turn to if you are looking for local search engine optimization for your regional website. However, many companies have client bases that cater primarily to a national or international field. Can they benefit from local search?

Yes, they can - in two ways (with a caveat for the first).

First, many customers prefer to deal with people that are local, even if the business is national, or even global. A businessperson that is looking for, say, marketing consulting, may be inclined to work with someone with an address in close proximity found through local search. It just feels more comfortable - if something goes wrong, he or she can request a meeting, rather than calling an 800 number.

Here’s the caveat - you may not want people showing up at your doorstep. Some companies invite people to show up at the headquarters and voice concerns or sing praises, but others would prefer to keep things at a distance. This is not a value judgment by any means. With many companies that deal with thousands, or even millions, of customers, it would be impossible to service every complaint with a human smile.

The second way, which seems more customer friendly (but actually isn’t), applies when a large company has many locations. This doesn’t mean that your company has “walk-in” locations that are open to the public. If you have locations in many cities, each serving a different function, you can still benefit from local search engine optimization.

Say, for example, you are headquartered in Toledo. You have distribution centers in several cities across the United States. Each of your physical locations is eligible to show up in local search results on Google, provided that you supply the engine with the proper information.

Of course, as mentioned earlier, not all searches with regional modifiers attached will bring up regional results. But based on recent happenings, it’s a good idea to make your regional presence known and consider the effects of local search engine optimization. After the years of talk about it, local search might finally turn out to be something that most companies can take advantage of.

Want more from your web site?
Search Influence can help! Targeted Traffic. Increased Revenue. Results Guaranteed. Customized Internet Marketing you can afford.

Comments Off

Google’s being sued for tricking advertisers into advertising on its content network – but the truth may be more damning than the lawsuit claims. Or is there a fatal mistake in the lawsuit filing?

Comments Off

Hey, I like Twitter, but this entire thing Robert Scoble started about how
Twitter had news of the Chinese earthquake before the US Geological Survey
seemed absurd. Did it really? As it turns out, probably so — by about three
minutes. Reading some of
the accounts
, you’d get the impression Twitter seemed to alert the USGS to
the news.

Click to continue reading…

Comments Off

The economic downturn is a reality, but the specific ways that it affects businesses run the gamut based on the size and type of business. During these times, small, local businesses often feel the pinch more quickly and sharply, causing some to take evasive maneuvers to keep afloat. Based on the Yellow Pages industry’s experience, those who stick with proven advertising programs—-rather than cutting them out of their budgets-—continue to find success with generating new customers and retaining current ones.

Click to continue reading…

Comments Off

Contrary to some earlier reports, Google’s new FriendConnect, launching today, is not focused on data portability or a direct answer to MySpace “Data Availability” or the new Facebook Connect. While there’s a data portability dimension, it’s focused on the flip side of the equation: site owners who want to make their sites more “social.”

Click to continue reading…

Comments Off

Contrary to some earlier reports, Google’s new FriendConnect, launching today, is not focused on data portability or a direct answer to MySpace “Data Availability” or the new Facebook Connect. While there’s a data portability dimension, it’s focused on the flip side of the equation: site owners who want to make their sites more “social.”

Click to continue reading…

Comments Off

A High Rankings Forum member talks about how he has a variety of sites that are all networked on the same server with the same owner. They’re not related topically, but there are some subpages where adding links may be of value to search engines and visitors. Would it be bad to link to pages in the same link network? Are there any risks?

It depends, actually. If you’re trying to hide the relationship between sites, as one says, it’s deceptive and could be dangerous. On the other hand, if you’re being open about the relationship and linking where appropriate, it should be fine.

Another option is to add “our link network” to the footer of the site to bring other people to your other pages. It’s not as topical, but it may drive traffic. However, that may not necessarily be the kind of traffic or links you’re aiming for, so that is totally up to you.

The forum discussion that ensues is informative, so take a read at High Rankings Forum.

Comments Off

A High Rankings Forum member talks about how he has a variety of sites that are all networked on the same server with the same owner. They’re not related topically, but there are some subpages where adding links may be of value to search engines and visitors. Would it be bad to link to pages in the same link network? Are there any risks?

It depends, actually. If you’re trying to hide the relationship between sites, as one says, it’s deceptive and could be dangerous. On the other hand, if you’re being open about the relationship and linking where appropriate, it should be fine.

Another option is to add “our link network” to the footer of the site to bring other people to your other pages. It’s not as topical, but it may drive traffic. However, that may not necessarily be the kind of traffic or links you’re aiming for, so that is totally up to you.

The forum discussion that ensues is informative, so take a read at High Rankings Forum.

Comments Off

The Search Engine Roundtable reports that it seems to be no longer possible to sign up for the Ambassador Program. Although there is no specific confirmation from Yahoo on that on the Ambassador program page, when one tries to sign up via an affiliate site, we get a notice that reads:

Yahoo will no longer be accepting new Ambassador applications until further notice.

Danny has also heard from a source that Yahoo will be dropping the Ambassador program soon. I will try to get confirmation from Yahoo on this rumor.

Comments Off

The Search Engine Roundtable reports that it seems to be no longer possible to sign up for the Ambassador Program. Although there is no specific confirmation from Yahoo on that on the Ambassador program page, when one tries to sign up via an affiliate site, we get a notice that reads:

Yahoo will no longer be accepting new Ambassador applications until further notice.

Danny has also heard from a source that Yahoo will be dropping the Ambassador program soon. I will try to get confirmation from Yahoo on this rumor.