Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Once You Are Flushed In The Google Toilet, There Is Only Down...

Interesting article in Forbes. While they are not an authority in SEO, Page Rank or ranking algorithms, Forbes provides an interesting story of how once you are flushed in the Google toilet, there is only down...

Condemned To Google Hell

Highlights:
1) Skyfacet.com, an online diamond business; Sanar was selling $3 million dollars worth of jewelry a year. Then in September 2006, Skyfacet no longer showed up on the first few pages of Google's results when users typed in search terms like "diamonds" and "engagement ring." The site's traffic vanished, and Sanar says his sales dropped $500,000 in three months.

2) Google's programmers appear to have created the supplemental index with the best intentions. It's designed to lighten the workload of Google's "spider," the algorithm that constantly combs and categorizes the Web's pages. Google uses the index as a holding pen for pages it deems to be of low quality or designed to appear artificially high in search results.

3) In retrospect, Sanar thinks he can trace his problem to a search marketing consultant he had paid $35,000 to improve Skyfacet's Google rankings. He now believes the consultant mistakenly replicated content on many of the site's pages, making them look like duplicate--that is, spam--content. But even after he reversed the consultant's changes, he couldn't get Skyfacet's pages out of Google Hell, where they remain today.


4) In an e-mail, Google product manager Prashanth Koppula offers little more in the way of an explanation. Asked if the supplemental index is getting bigger, he responds that "new pages are constantly being added," but that the "algorithmic nature" of Google's spider makes it hard to measure the index's size or how fast it's growing. That's not a problem, Koppula says, because supplemental results are no less legitimate than normal results, and pages in the supplemental index aren't checked any less frequently by Google's spider.

In summary, on the Internet there is a very small heaven, and a massive hell.

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Monday, April 30, 2007

From DMV to GDMV: Google to Replace DMV?

States Teaming Up With Google On Open Government Partnership

By providing free consulting and some software, Google Inc. is helping state governments make reams of public records that are now unavailable or hard to find online easily accessible to Web surfers.

The Internet search company hopes to eventually persuade federal agencies to employ the same tools - an effort that excites advocates of open government but worries some consumer privacy experts.

Google plans to announce Monday that it has already partnered with four states - Arizona, California, Utah and Virginia to know access thousands of public records dealing with education, real estate, health care and the environment.


Will we now do our driver's license online at Google Department of Motor Vehicles.

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