Archive for Search Results
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Today TechCrunch reported on the birth of a new search engine: Yuil. Now Yuil is dead.
Yuil (pronounced yule) was a short-lived Yahoo-powered mashup designed to look like Cuil.
Apparently the Yahoo Boss mashup — something of a search engine Frankenstein monster — was destroyed by its inventor.
Yuil was designed by Yahoo VP of Platforms, Sam Pullara. Yuil was a brilliant marketing move designed to show off the new Yahoo BOSS API. BOSS gives developers a high level of control over SERPs generated by Yahoo’s search engine.
The primary difference between the Yahoo Boss API, and the standard API-based engines is the ability to manipulate and reorder the results.
When it comes to SEO, there is one thing that we can never overlook. That is, content writing. I am a strong believe in SEO techniques and other strategies that help you get on the top of SERPs. However, I also believe that the bottom line is having great content. You [...]

This morning investment bank Collins Stewart hosted a confrerence call for clients who wanted to learn more about Microsoft Live Search Cashback.
The buzz and excitement surrounding the Cashback launch has been palpable.
CNET has coverage of the Microsoft Live Search Cashback call this morning.
What’s truly brilliant about Microsoft’s move: share of searches is the most watched index of search engine success. What matters most, though, is the quality of those searches.
The most valuable searches are commercial searches. Helping satisfy the collective curiosity of a nation is, at times, a noble mission. Most searches, though, tend to be news and gossip-related.
While it’s great for the online tabloid industry, there’s not much value in being the go-to search engine for the Gossip Girl and lad mag crowd. Does a search engine really care if it delivers the best results for “elke the stallion,” gyrotonics, and “la rag mag?”
Microsoft wants all Americans who receive a $600 rebate check to think of Live.com search first. If you’re going to spend money online, what’s the most relevant result?
The SERP that delivers value, savings and bargains.
When it comes to SEO techniques and their implementation, many people tend to focus on the goal of having their URL come out at the top of the SERPs. And why not? We all want our sites to come up when someone types in a keyword or key phrase that is relevant to [...]
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Has there been a change in the SERPs? You might find out about it first - from Twitter.
Twitter has been breaking all sorts of news lately, from weather events to earthquakes. Now, it’s becoming a great source for finding out about possible search engine updates.
This morning, I read the following:
@alscillitani: anyone else noticing their rankings change several times over the last 24 hours in google. Up, down, back to up, ??? weird!!
@danlondon: @alscillitani I am seeing a few rankings bounce around. what is up?
This is a great way for Search Engine Marketers to put social media to use. It’s easy to think that social media must be used for marketing and sales, but remember that tools like Twitter are great for networking and keeping up with the industry.
What are your thoughts on Twitter and search engine marketing? Let us know by leaving a comment!
Related Reading:
Is Twitter the New Google Alternative?
Twitter and Search

On Thursday, Google Research engineers presented a paper at the International World Wide Web Conference in Beijing on PageRank for Google Images (pdf) to improve search results for photos, art and graphics. The system promises better image results than are currently available when searching in Google Images and may eventually improve Google Universal Search SERPs.
Key takeaways: Google’s breakthrough uses the “wisdom of the crowd” and contextual signals to rank the relevancy of images. VisualRank does not improve on a search engine’s ability to identify people or determine activities in a photo. The biggest benefits will be reduction of duplicate image content in search results and reduction of “image spam” or inappropriately tagged photos.
This morning The NY Times reported on the new ranking algorithm that identifies and analyzes “authority” nodes and “visual link structure” between a group of images. As with PageRank, images are assigned numbers to define their relevance and relative importance.
Google conducted a series of experiments by retrieving images for 2,000 of the most popular products queries in Google. Users in the experiments were more satisfied by the results and felt they were more relevant.
The Google SERP image shown here displays top ranking results for a group of queries. You can judge for yourself how intuitive and relevant the results are. Google notes an interesting result for the query “Picasso Paintings”; not only are all the images by Picasso, one of his most famous, “Guernica”, was selected first.
We’re assuming the search queries related to the product, “Febreze” were spelled correctly, unlike the typo in the paper misspelled as: “Fabreze.” The current Google image results for keyword “fabreze” are quite different.
Winners: Trademark owners of big brands and commercial products
Losers: All those people who spent innumerable hours tagging photos in Google Image Labeler:
All-time Top Google Image Labeler Contributors
1. SunChaser has 22,961,020 points
2. Zip has second with 22,353,450 points
3. FrD AUTO no car has 15,460,240 points
4. MC DUDE no man has a close 15,350,830 points
5. Mighty is hot on the heels of MC DUDE: 15,339,300 points
Google believes a Web page author will likely choose relevant images for a topic. People, though, don’t typically link to content based on the relevance of images. People link to text.
Google gives an example of an ambiguous query (McDonalds) with a logo that can be identified in photos that link commercial searches. That’s a “visual theme” or ‘visual signal” among all the photos. There may be lots of other themes that can define the relative “strength” of common and commercial images.
In terms of overall performance on queries, the proposed VisualRank displayed fewer irrelevant images than Google for 762 queries. Google’s standard image search producee better results in only 70 search results. In the remaining 202 queries, both approaches tied. Google notes in the majority of these queries, there were no irrelevant images).
Chris Silver Smith over at NetConcepts found case sensitive results in Google SERPs. Let’s hope this is just some error and not a change that will see many people scrambling to make wholesale changes to their SEO efforts.
Talk about ways to further pollute the results…. rewritten copy saying the same thing but geared towards upper and lower case search results… does anyone win here?
Just over a week after changes to Google SERPs were seen, over at Webmaster World, forum participants are noticing some changes going on in the Yahoo results.
Jgold454 kicked off the conversation:
I am noticing some changes/shuffling going on in my niche. Anyone else?
Textex also noticed a change:
I did some more thorough investigating and these results are really bad….
BillyS was finally seeing some relief since the last update:
Yahoo is like clockwork, pretty much rolling out a new update every 4-5 weeks. This update was right on time. The last one was announced on March 3rd.
We lost about 50% of our Y! traffic during the last update and we noticed a nice lift today.
FrankWeb wasn’t thrilled with the wikis turning up in results:
Looks like an update to me. See wiki pages climbing to the top for many results. Why do they even want for each term a wiki to turn up. If I want a wiki explanation or information, I’ll go to it myself. I find it a step back for search results.
Hat tip to Barry Schwartz