Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Google Updates AdWords Display URL

Google Updates AdWords Display URL Policy

As of April 1, Google will be making significant changes to their enforcement of display URL policies. The “Policy Team” has taken a stricter stance on the relationship between display URLs and destination URLs — and they will be allowing few exceptions to their rules. In short, if your destination URL is www.example.com, your display URL must be www.example.com. Just to alleviate any confusion: display URLs are what is displayed in your ad text – destination URLs are where your ad text leads post-click.

Google’s changes are subtle, but worth noting by all AdWords advertisers. The first change affects anyone who has a display URL such as “.co.uk” but actually uses a “.com” destination URL. This rule will target all generic top-level domains (gTLDs like .biz, .net, etc.). If you use any redirected URLs in your ad texts, take notice. Google will no longer accept display URLs that are actually redirects of a primary domain (i.e. Display – exemple.com which is a redirect to Destination – example.com). The other firm example from Google deals with the use of multiple domains or vanity URLs. In other words, you will no longer be able to use two different URLs that point to the same content.

In the notice that I received, some FAQs were mentioned. The first of which dealt with the use of tracking URLs. Using custom tracking URLs (destination) that deviate from your display URL will be OK if, and only if, the URL of the landing page matches the display URL. The rule breaker would then be if you have a custom tracking URL that leads to a landing page with a URL that deviates from your ad. The following will explain this in more detail:

  • OK display: www.example.com >> destination w/ custom tracking: www.trackingurl.com/{customstuff} >> landing page: www.example.com
  • NOT OK display: www.example.com >> destination w/custom tracking: www.trackingurl.com/{customstuff} >> landing page: www.trackingurl.com

Also included in the FAQs on the policy changes were Quality Score concerns. Google admits that after making changes to your display URLs, you could see changes in your minimum bids. To limit these changes they suggest that you confine changes to one account – in other words don’t transfer your efforts for a new account and start over. Additionally, they suggest that you make changes to the ads associated with your highest-performing keywords first.

As always, there are still exceptions. The aforementioned changes will not affect your AdWords account if you fall under one of these categories:

  • Shopping platforms with shopping carts on a different domain.
  • Direct pharmaceutical manufactuers (laws allow them to work around Google’s policies)
  • Adult websites where the domain is prohibited due to explicit content.
  • Any domain that is longer than 35 characters in length: that’s just too darn long!
  • Resellers with standard hosting (i.e. reachlocal.biz).

Today’s post was just a heads up for everyone currently using AdWords. My suggestion would be to begin writing your ads with these new policies in mind, if you don’t already. And remember that you have until April 1st to get your ad texts prepared. Personally, I have a few “multiple domain” issues to correct that I will be taking care of ASAP!

Please leave me a comment if you have any questions.

Friday, February 8, 2008

Update on Google AdSense 2008

Update on Google AdSense

On January 9th, I posted a blog about my three month earning history with Google AdSense.

My earrning reports are in for the month of January so I just wanted to give you a quick update. I finally figured out how to set up seperate channels for each of my blogs so now I can see exactly how much each one is earning. Prior to setting up the channels, all my earnings were lumped into one report so I had no way of knowing which blog was outperforming the others.

Here is the breakdown of my earnings so far:

October - 75 cents
November - $2.62
December - $3.38
January - $24.51

Wow!!!! Why has January taken off? Well, part of it is because two of my blogs are now 4 months old and finally starting to generate a decent amount of traffic. The Pagan Path blog has actually been earning a few more $$ than the I Love Herbs blog. I think this is because there are tons of herb sites out there, and the search term herbs is rather generic. So I don't think the ads that are showing up on I Love Herbs are that unique.

Paganism Pays?
Why does the pagan site generate a bit more revenue? At first this seemed puzzling - there are a ton more herb sites on the internet than pagan sites. But that is probably why I am getting higher ad revenue. Although there are fewer pagans in the world than herbalists there aren't that many pagan blog sites out there which means there isn't as much competition for pagan readers as compared to herbal readers. And most of the ads on my pagan blog are much more specific than the more generic ads showing up on my herb blog. So the ads on the pagan blog are getting a much higher click through.

Another reason why my ad revenue took off for the month of January was that on December 27th I took over the inactive Freelance Online Work blog that was in Orble's blog cemetary. I don't post that often to the freelance site compared to my other blogs but when I do they get a fantastic amount of readers. And they get quite a few ad clicks.

Freelancing is Hot
Freelancing is a very hot topic right now. Everybody and their brother is investigating freelance opportunities as a way to generate some extra income in addition to their day jobs. My engineering friend, my middle management friend, and my former English teacher friend have all been picking my brains about how to get started making money as an online freelance writer. I am certainly no expert but according to them I am. I investigate freelancing opportunities almost daily and often click on the ads I find on other freelancing sites.

Other Freelancing Sites
Speaking of other freelancing sites, be sure to check out Writer's Notes here on the Orble network. Besides being full of fantastic information, Writer's Notes blogger Jeanne Dininni is a really friendly person and will answer any questions you may have regarding her blog posts. Jeanne just celebrated the one year annivesary of her blog.

Additional Information
I just set up my first blogger blog - http://herbalapothecary.blogspot.com. I want to see how that site performs in comparison to my three Orble blogs. So I will be posting details on that blogging network in the future. Blogger/blogspot is owned by Google. I've earned a whole penny on Herbal Apothecary so far, but it's a brand new site so it will take it awhile before it starts to generate any traffic.

SOURCE: http://www.freelanceonlinework.com/update-on-google-adsense/

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Do Follow Link List

Do Follow Link List And Search Engine Optimization

The day of buying and selling links is well over. As google, yahoo and msn have become very accurate in spotting and ranking sites badly who do this. So no webmasters are engaging in the practice. But another very important reason is the existence of do follow blog lists. Meaning if you leave a detailed response on a blog and they install do follow, it will count the same as any back link and help you rank well in search engines.

As you can imagine webmasters are trying to get there hands on these new do follow blog link lists like there is no tomorrow. But the good thing is blog lists like Courtney Tuttle's and Nic Cursor's have about 1000 do follow blogs listed on it. Which makes it great and easy to use. And one thing is for sure if you complete the thousand on a specific keyword, its highly likely you will be on the front page for it even across the major search engines in a highly competitive and popular keyword.

But you have to be professional in the way you conduct your self. Do not go leaving spammy comments, because the blog owner is not going to approve it and a lot of bloggers will be annoyed with you. Simply read a post by the blogger, the entire post and leave a detailed and lengthy comment, which will most likely be approved. The bloggers are allowing people to do this so we should respect it and contribute to the blog with solid responses.

Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Steven_Francesco_Simpson



Monday, February 4, 2008

Why Everyone Mad at Google

Why Everyone is Mad at Google

It may seem at first glance that everyone who is mad at Google is mad for a different reason: direct rivals, copyright holders, companies that advertise with the search engine giant. In fact, putting all the reasons together reveals an uncomfortably familiar pattern of behavior.

In late April, Business Week ran an article that talked about how everybody seemed to be ganging up on Google. The author put together a very impressive list, with no fewer than nine different foes, ranging from single companies (such as eBay) to groups (such as human rights activists and search engine upstarts) to parts of the U.S. government (i.e. the Department of Justice). All of these organizations are gunning for Google, "lining up to keep the search giant in check," according to the article. If Google is feeling a bit embattled by all this, it's certainly no wonder.

But why is everyone mad at Google? What did Google ever do to them? The company was and remains one of the biggest friends that someone doing large amounts of general research on the Internet ever had, and that's hardly something to get angry about. Or is it? Indeed, many of the organizations named in the article must come to grips with the fact that the people who find them online probably do so through Google. In some cases, they also must face the usual problems of being out competed by Google, and not just for customers, as you'll soon see.

The author of the Business Week article explained the reasons each of Google's enemies has for being ticked off at the company. At first glance, it may look like every one of them has a different reason to hate Google. But that's not an accurate picture. It's like looking at a strong magnification of an image made by an inkjet printer - all you see is each little dot, and you need to pull back in order to see the whole image.

In this article, I'm going to focus more on the reasons for anger at Google rather than exactly who is angry at the company. I think you'll see a pattern emerge that we have seen before. I know I'm not the first one to compare Google with Microsoft (who was surprisingly absent from the Business Week list, and should not have been). But the parallels seem to be getting more and more convincing as time goes on.

Any large successful company is going to attract the best and brightest brains. When that company looks as if it is riding the wave of the future, it's going to have more applicants than it knows what to do with. Add to that the kind of working conditions and work environment that is the envy of Silicon Valley, and even recruiting well-established talent with strong positions at prestigious companies becomes rather like shooting fish in a barrel.

Hardcore eBayers may know that the online auctioneer recently went live with eBay Express, a website at which users can purchase goods for fixed prices. What they might not know is that eBay needed to create a new search technology, codenamed Magellan, in order to make the site work. Louis Monier, the engineer who developed that technology at eBay, left to join Google last year.

It's sometimes easy to forget that Amazon also has its own search engine, A9. It's for searching the web as well as searching Amazon's website. A9 has its own CEO. Until earlier this year, that person was Udi Manber. He left, and is also working for Google now.

Of course, the most prominent example of "brain drain" is Kai-fu Lee. This former Microsoft vice president worked on the software giant's expansion into China and certain natural language projects at the company. He now works for Google, but Microsoft didn't let him go without a fight. It slapped the search engine with an acrimonious lawsuit over the non-disclosure agreement Lee signed while working at Microsoft, which sought to limit the damage caused by Lee "going over to the enemy." Even now, it's interesting to note that (at the time of this writing) the top result for "Kai-fu Lee" in Google is Microsoft's bio page for him, which notes that he left the software giant in July of 2005.

What was perhaps most insulting for Microsoft is that Lee was not the first high-level "brain" it lost to Google, and probably won't be the last. Indeed, this must be a pretty major adjustment for Microsoft, which has long been used to being "the" company to work for. I rather doubt it's happy about yielding that distinction to Google.

To those of us who depend on Google to find things on the Internet, the company is a search engine. To those of us who have businesses that we hope web surfers will find on the Internet, Google is an advertising company with a very special relationship to our most important advertising medium. It doesn't matter whether you're big or small; you probably owe more of your business to Google than you're really comfortable with.

The first example of this that comes to mind is KinderStart. I wrote about the childcare-related website's attempt at a class action lawsuit against Google recently, so I won't go through all the details here. It's pretty clear even from a cursory glance at the website in question that KinderStart earned the penalty Google awarded it, and that KinderStart's lawsuit has no merit. On the other hand, it says something that being penalized in Google's SERPs could hurt a company's business so badly it would feel it had no recourse but to sue the search engine.

If you think KinderStart and other small to medium-sized businesses are the only ones that could suffer badly from a "Google death penalty," think again. The German website for Mercedes Benz received one not too long ago, and the auto maker moved quickly to correct the problem that caused it to be delisted. Many observers said at the time that the move was more of a publicity stunt on Google's part than anything...but if that's true, why did Mercedes Benz act so fast?

It's not just the organic listings that matter, of course. Many companies buy sponsored links. I tend to not pay much attention to them, but other searchers must, or else companies wouldn't buy them. Take eBay, for instance. I don't know about you, but if I want to check out what the online auctioneer has to offer, I type the site right into my browser. But it has plenty to offer surfers even when they're not thinking of finding it at the world's largest ongoing garage sale; that's why eBay bids on up to 15 million keywords at the major search engines, including Google. That's not the most comfortable position for eBay to be in, considering some of Google's new services threaten to compete with the auctioneer.

The subject of competition brings us to Google's biggest search rival, Yahoo. eBay recently made a wide-ranging deal with Yahoo, which should reduce its dependence on Google. But even Yahoo has been rumored to be doing business with Google by running ads for some of its own services on Google's network! If that doesn't show the strength of Google's position in the field, I can't imagine what would.

It reminds me a little of how many companies struggled to get some kind of advertising bundled with Microsoft's operating system, whether it was an icon on the desktop or a preloaded link on the IE browser. It also reminds me of how, no matter what kind of business you have, if you use computers, you almost have to do business with Microsoft in one way or another. You might simply use Microsoft's software (because everyone you deal with does and you need to be compatible), or you might build software that has to be able to interface with Microsoft programs (because everyone uses Microsoft programs, so you need to ensure you reach the widest market), or you might need to make sure your hardware is compatible with Microsoft's operating system (because...well, you get the idea). It's pretty easy to see the parallel with Google here.

This section almost deserves an article in its own right - though, to be honest, there isn't an obvious parallel with Microsoft in Google's conduct here. Perhaps we can see the similarity if we think in terms of Google (or Microsoft) threatening someone's livelihood by providing something for free that the other person charges for. Microsoft has used its monopoly power deliberately in this way to put competitors out of business.

Google isn't apparently trying to put anyone out of business by its behavior, but since it's one of the top websites that everyone goes to when they want answers, it has the same effect. Google has information, which it gives away for free. If it gives away enough information, users don't see any need to go to the linked source. So rather than gaining from the increased visibility, the site linked to in Google's SERPs actually loses something.

The argument may seem a little far-fetched, but it's been used. And it's no wonder when there's money on the line. Information may want to be free, but some content is copyrighted - and that means its use is supposed to be under the control of the copyright holders. You may remember when Google changed its logo to honor deceased Spanish artist Joan Miro on April 20 - and had to change it back because the search engine didn't get permission from Joan Miro's family to use the images. That's merely scratching the surface when compared to the other hot water Google is in over copyright issues.

Take book publishers, for example. The Google Books project aims to scan millions of books from five of the world's largest libraries and make them searchable on Google's website. That includes copyrighted works. Publishers and authors say that's copyright infringement, while Google insists that, since it will only show small pieces of copyrighted works, it's legal under an exemption in the law intended for research. The disagreement has gotten to the point that the Authors Guild filed a class action lawsuit against Google; so have several major publishers. The suit won't go to trial for a few months yet - and in the meantime, Google is still scanning books.

Website publishers also have grounds to be mad at Google for copyright infringement issues. The owner of Perfect 10, an adult website, sued Google for showing thumbnails of the site's copyrighted images of women. Judge Howard Matz issued a preliminary injunction against Google, stating that its image search likely infringes copyright law. Fortunately for Perfect 10 and other websites that make their money from paid subscriptions to their content, there is a way to use a robots.txt file to keep Google from indexing certain pages of a website.

That trick won't work as well if you want people to actually know about the content on your pages, and come visit to get the answer to your question rather than just see what Google turns up. This could become a real problem if Google starts implementing technology being developed by an Australian researcher. Dubbed Orion search, the technology returns more information when a user puts in keywords than you would normally see in the SERPs. It takes advantage of natural connections between knowledge. For example, if you're looking for information about the American Revolution, your search might also pull up connected information about George Washington.

The point is, someone using Orion search technology might be more likely to find their answer among the results returned - and stay on Google's website to keep searching, rather than visit the website(s) that actually contain the information. This could be very good for Google, and for businesses whose advertising shows on the search engine's website. It might not be so good for the sites that turn up in the SERPs, and for businesses who advertise on those sites. A lot of people all but forget that even websites are covered by copyright law - and using the content of a website without its permission is still copyright infringement, and illegal.

So where do these issues leave the rest of us? We're not quite over the same barrel with Google that we have been with Microsoft; Google still has some strong, viable competitors. But it sure seems to be headed in the same direction. The last thing we need is another big company acting like it owns our business, but it's going to take some major work by Google's rivals to slow down this juggernaut.

Source: http://ecommerce.matrix-e.com/seo/why-everyone-is-mad-at-google.html

TIPS optimize Flash pages - GOOGLE

The secret of getting high rankings with Flash sites, Google bombing

Multimedia elements, such as videos and flash movies, are a great way to spice up a website. Unfortunately, Flash cannot be indexed by most search engines. For that reason, it is very difficult to get high search engine rankings for Flash sites.

Even Google officially tells webmasters that it is difficult to get ranked with Flash sites: "If fancy features such as _JavaScript, cookies, session IDs, frames, DHTML, or Flash keep you from seeing all of your site in a [simple] text browser, then search engine spiders may have trouble crawling your site."

Does it helps much to optimize your Flash pages?


It is very difficult to optimize Flash pages for high search engine rankings. You can use tricks like the attribute or the attribute to add keywords and text to your Flash elements.

However, this doesn't allow you to create enough content so that search engines consider your web pages relevant to a special keyword.

You can also create special text pages that are only presented to search engines. In that case, search engines might ban your web site from their index because you're cloaking.

Is it absolutely impossible to rank well with Flash sites?


Although it is very difficult to get high rankings with Flash sites, it is not impossible. The trick is that you don't have to optimize your web page content. You have to optimize the links to your site.

The top result on Google for the search term “miserable failure” is not on position one because the web page had been optimized for that search term. Web users entering the term into Google search engine are directed to the biography of the president on the White House website. This prank by members of an online community can affect the results of Google searches - called "Google bombing" - by linking many web sites to that web site with the text miserable failure in the link text.

That means that you can get top rankings on Google without optimizing your web pages. The problem is that you have to get many incoming links that contain the keyword for which you want to get high rankings in the link text.

You can get top rankings on Google without optimizing your web pages

To get your web site to the top of Google's search results, search for web sites that are related to your site. Ask the webmasters of these web sites to link to your web site and ask them to include your search term in the link to your site.

The more links you get, the higher your rankings will be. If you cannot change the contents of your web pages than it is very important that you get many inbound links to your web site. If you have many good inbound links, then you can get high rankings without optimizing your web pages.

Of course, it is much easier to get high rankings if you have many inbound links and optimized web page content.

Source: http://ecommerce.matrix-e.com/seo/the-secret-of-getting-high-rankings-with-flash-sites-google-bombing.html

Friday, February 1, 2008

Social network sites slow Google

Social network sites slow Google


Google yesterday blamed the difficulty of making money from placing adverts on social networking sites for holding back its growth in the latest quarter, contributing to a 9 per cent slump in its shares in after-market trading.

The search company also reported an unexpectedly sharp slowdown in the number of "clicks" people make on its online adverts, contributing to the nervousness on Wall Street about underlying demand for its core advertising services.

The latest share price decline left Google's shares down 25 per cent for the first month of the year and mirrored similar declines in other internet stocks in recent days as investors have grown concerned about the effects of growing competition and changing consumer behaviour on the internet.

"We have found that social networks are not monetising as well as we were expecting," said George Reyes, chief financial officer, as Google reported its earnings for the final quarter of last year.

Since Google has guaranteed to make minimum payments to a number of social networks that carry its advertising, principally MySpace, the slow growth of the business had left the company out of pocket and contributed to falling profit margins in the quarter, he added.

Sergey Brin, co-founder, said a number of initiatives in the final months of last year to boost social networking advertising had failed, but that he remained confident that Google would find ways to build a successful business around the growing traffic on these sites.

Other Google executives said that the difficulties arose from creating an appropriate "look and feel" for adverts, so that they matched the content on social networks.

At the same time, Google reported a 30 per cent increase in "paid clicks" in the final quarter of last year, a marked slowdown from the 45 per cent growth of a year before.

Google's revenues, excluding the traffic acquisition costs it pays to other websites that carry its adverts, rose by 52 per cent in the latest quarter to $3.39bn, slower than the 55 per cent growth analysts had expected. Net income rose 17 per cent to $1.2bn, or $3.79 a share, or $4.43 a share excluding stock option expenses, roughly in line with Wall Street estimates.

Source: http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/9b6d342e-d068-11dc-9309-0000779fd2ac.html