Personalization And The Death Of SEO |  | Visited: 1348 |
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| | by Dave Davies April 26, 2007 |
| Dave Davies |
Dave Davies is the CEO of Beanstalk
Search Engine Positioning, Inc. He writes with 6 years of experience
in search
engine optimization, link building and reacting to
algorithm additions and updates. You can keep yourself updated on
the latest goings-on in the SEO and search engine world on
Beanstalk’s
blog or, of course, on our site here. |
| Dave Davies
has written 11 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Dave Davies... |
… as we know it. On February
2, 2007 Google launched its big push into personalized search
results. This was, to many, a dark day as SEO’s scrambled to
determine exactly what this meant for the industry and for our
clients. Different results showing up for different people? What
are ranking reports if what you see differs from what I see? Who’s
right? And of course, how do I prove it?
I’ll admit it; my first thoughts at
the launch of personalization were not necessarily along the most
positive tangents. Upon further reflection (and much of it) and
after wading through seven patents to get a better feel for the
variables and what they mean (and might mean down the road) I came to
one conclusion, coincidentally the same conclusion I consistently
come to after each major algorithm update or search technology
advancement: Anything that improves the search experience improves
the SEO industry. This may seem an obvious statement but when the
search engines (especially Google) throw a curve ball at us, one
cannot help but worry.
This article will focus on two areas,
what is personalization and how will the SEO industry evolve to
accommodate this new feature? The answer to the later is quite clear
once one understands how personalized results are created.
What Is Personalization?
The most basic explanation of
personalization is that it is a system by which the search engines
are able to extract patterns from previous search behavior and adjust
present and future search results based on “learned” preferences.
The simplest example can be found in the repeated selection of a
single site when it appears in the search results. Ego drives many
(present company included) to click on their own site when it shows
up in the search results. Once the site is selected multiple times
it will rise in the results when the same or a similar search is run
again by the same user. Google has thus learned that you like this
site and is now making it easier to get to it again.
What we can see from the patents that
are out there indicate that personalization is going to go MUCH
further than this and get far more sophisticated. Like any new
technology, it is now in its first stages and as more data can be
collected and more time put into tweaking the way personalized
results are created and displayed the more factors they will be
looking at. The numbers of potential factors, as with any algorithm,
are virtually endless in theory however there are some key factors
that come up repeatedly in the patents that are sure to hold weight
as personalization evolves. They are:
Your personal search history.
What you look for and the sites/ads that you select will affect the
results you receive when you search. Right now this seems to
primarily be restricted to increasing the position of a site that is
selected multiple times when it appears in a set of search engine
result however as this technology evolves your past behaviors and the
types of sites you select in the results will surely be applied to
new searches, increasing the positions of sites that have similar
characteristics to ones you have selected in the past for completely
different queries.
Your behavior on a selected site.
What you do on a site and how long it takes you to return to the
search engine is or soon will be a factor. The search engines have
clearly stated that their main goal is to deliver a positive
experience to their users. The more readily a searcher finds the
information they are looking for in a set of results, the better the
experience and thus, the more likely that searcher is to continue to
use that engine. If Google discovers that when a visitor lands on a
site they are likely to stay for only a couple of seconds then that
site can reasonably be considered less relevant for a specific query
than one whose visitor’s remain on their site for a minute or two.
The former site will thus lose position for the phrase and the later
will increase. All indications are that if this is the case for a
single phrase, that the rankings for other phrases the site ranks for
will not be affected however I would speculate that if visitors react
poorly to a site for multiple phrases, that the value of the site as
a whole will be reduced and the rankings will be affected globally.
Your location. Especially
important for mobile search but sure to gain importance for specific,
localized phrases – your business location relative to the searcher
will gain importance. A search for a phrase such as “seo services”
is likely to be unaffected by such factors (unless the searcher has a
past history of selecting sites from his/her own region for multiple
phrases) however if a searcher searches for “pizza victoria” and
the engine is able to pick up that the searcher is from Victoria,
Texas and not Victoria, BC those sites that promote a pizza
restaurant in Victoria, Texas will be increased in the results.
The patterns of similar searchers.
And now it gets even more complex. It does not appear that at this
time the search engines are yet grouping users together to find
common search patterns however there are multiple references in their
patent applications that Google will be looking for ways to group
users together by search patterns, interests, or memberships in
communities to provide personalized results based on what others with
similar interested have selected. For example, if I as a searcher am
looking for blue widgets and after looking at a number sites I spend
a few minutes on site xyz.com and you do the same and then a couple
days later I am looking for green gromits the search engine will
reference your search patterns. If you have looked for green gromits
in the past the engine will use your experience (i.e. which sites did
you visit and for how long) to affect my rankings based on our past
similar behavior. Now, when we’re dealing with just two people
searching there isn’t a lot of information to affect the rakings
however when the engines are looking at global rules across millions
of searchers they are able to determine which types of searchers are
selecting which types of results by grouping users with similar
interests/patterns together and increasing the position of those
sites that the majority of the group has found most desirable.
The engines can also use memberships in
communities and bookmarking similarities to establish common
interests and patterns to increase and decrease a site’s position
for specific phrases or to raise the site’s value as a whole.
Your value as a visitor. A
colleague of mine and a brilliant reporter on the industry, Jim
Hedger brought a point to my attention that snuck past me the first
time I read it but which now jumps out as both interesting and
important. An engine can (and likely will) assign users with their
own PageRank. What this basically translates into is a value that
your vote will have when you visit a site and its effect on the
overall results of the many. If Google decides that I am a
lack-luster searcher and seem to select sites that others with
similar interests do not then my personal PageRank will be decreases
and thus, the sites I visit will be given less of a boost than those
of a user whose selected sites match those that others find
favorable. That user will then receive an increase in their personal
PageRank as their voting power will be deemed higher than others and
their decisions more reflective of the most-desired-results.
As noted, there are a wide array of
factors covered in the patents and only through research, testing,
watching and waiting will we discover the true nature of the
evolution of this technology. This doesn’t mean that all we can do
is sit and wait. There will be sites that do well as personalization
evolves and sites that do not. So what do you do to help hedge your
bets and increase your chances of being on the right side of the
winners-losers table?
How Will The SEO Industry Evolve?
As with any evolution in the search
engine algorithms, the addition of personalization into the equation
means that the community needs to adjust what we’re doing and how
we rank websites. This has ramifications for SEO’s and for website
owners alike however one of the differences here compared to past
changes is that some of the changes will affect only one of the two
groups. Usually what affects SEO’s will affect the website owner
and vice-versa. This is not necessarily the case with
personalization.
Let us take for example a scenario in
which algorithmic updates outside of the personalization realm affect
the site in a negative manner but at the same time changes from
within the personalization realm affect the site positively. This
would result in a scenario where the global results would show
decreases in rankings but where members of communities, regions or
other relevant groupings would find the site appearing higher in
their results. A ranking report would show decreases but a traffic
and conversion report may well show increases due to the site
appearing high to users who are likely searching for the type of
information your site provides. This is where much of the concern
and confusion lies in the minds of those offering SEO services.
From this one thing is clear, SEO as we
know it will be coming to a slow but sure death. The rules that once
applied, those that were universal, will no longer apply. New ways
of conducting SEO campaigns need to be developed that don’t just
target the universal algorithm but also take into account the factors
included in the personalization components.
While currently the effects of
personalization have not been widely recognized, this is due in large
part to the fact that the majority of search users are not searching
Google with the personalization turned on (by remaining signed into a
Google service such as AdWords, GMail, Blogger, etc.). This will
change. Here are ways that more and more of the search population
will be added to those receiving personalized results (note: this is
far from all of them and new ways to track user behavior are sure to
be developed):
Toolbars added by default to
installed browsers on new computers as is the case created in the
recent agreement between Google and Dell in May, 2006.
Toolbars being included in
browsers such as Firefox as was established in an agreement between
the two in August, 2006.
Search engine produced browsers
installed by default into mobile phones as was agreed upon in a deal
between Google and LG in March, 2007.
Some other factors that are going to
increase the number of searchers affected by personalized results:
New methods for tracking visitor
behavior developed.
New engines providing personalized
results. Yahoo!, with all their social properties, is well
positioned to expand into this area and Microsoft, with their
control over desktops and browsers, is in a highly superior position
in the area of visitor behavior and site selection tracking, even
from competing search engines.
Basically we’re heading into a world
where more and more people will be receiving personalized results and
in which more and more people are being tracked to provide superior
sets of data to base group-based personalized results on. So what do
we need to plan for and what can SEO’s do to prepare their clients
and the websites they optimize to rank highly in the face of
personalization? To be sure, new tactics will be developed and
resources made available as the technology matures however here are
some steps you can take today to help promote high rankings in
personalized results. Below you will find them listed based on the
criteria we listed above as being measured:
Personal search history. Having
a website that ranks for multiple related phrases and which provides
valuable content for all of them is a great way to affect a visitor’s
search history. If a visitor goes to your site multiple times and
remains on your site for a reasonable period of time then your site
will be given a boost when future search queries are performed that
include your site in the results. As a bonus, this is just a best
practice regardless and will provide more high quality traffic
in-and-of itself.
Behavior on a selected site.
When visitors land on your site, the time they spend there can be
tracked by the engine. This means that if your site has stickiness
and searchers spend a reasonable amount of time there when it shows
up in the results, the rankings will increase for that phrase.
Basically, the better designed your site is to provide visitors with
the information and experience they are looking for the higher it
will show up in the results in future searches. The only tip I will
give here on how to accomplish this is to make the information that a
searcher is likely looking for when conducting a specific search easy
to find. Past this we are getting into a variety of usability and
copywriting issues. These are definitely important for SEO and for
your site health and will only become more important over time
however they could not possibly be covered adequately here. As an
added bonus again, changes made to improve the visitor behavior on
your website are going to increase conversions and keep the visitor
there for longer periods of time.
You also may want to consider adding
Google Analytics code to your site. Here I feel it necessary to give
a few clarifications regarding some of the common reservations with
using Google Analytics. The biggest common concern among web
marketers in general is that Google will use the data obtained
through Analytics (especially if you are using conversion tracking)
to affect bids for those using AdWords at some point down the road.
I’m not sure if I entirely believe they would do this however it is
definitely within their abilities. They could also adjust the
position of your paid add in the results based on how users react to
your site once you give them the ability to view how visitors behave.
It’s on the tangent that we head into the effects Google Analytics
could theoretically have on your organic results. We know that
Google wants to provide the best possible experience to their users
(even more true in the organic realm than the paid). When you use
Google Analytics you are effectively telling them how visitors behave
on your site. If their behavior is not positive (low time on site or
low page views) then Google could theoretically affect the position
of your site in the search results based on this. This is the area
that most concerns me personally and relates to this article. My
rule of thumb is that it is best to use other analytics tools until
you see that your traffic patterns are favorable and then install
Analytics. At this point you would actually want Google to see your
traffic patterns and visitor behavior.
Your location. While you can’t
affect the location of your business or your searchers you can affect
how you rank for localized phrases. The tactics here fall into
standard SEO tactics, however the first step is outside of the
traditional SEO realm and that is to be sure to get your business
listed on Google
maps. Most of us have seen the map results showing up
in the search results. This gives you an opportunity to show up
above the natural results for localized phrases or, in future, for
generic phrases where the results are based on the searchers position
geographically. It’s also a great way to “tell” Google where
you’re located so if localization becomes a defining characteristic
of a searcher, your site will appear when relevant.
You’ll also want to engage in
traditional link building efforts from regionally specific resources
such as city-specific business directories, and related businesses in
the area. There have been many great articles written on link
building and there is certainly not space here to do it justice.
The patterns of similar searchers.
When you know what searchers of specific criteria (such as search
phrase) do when they enter your site you need to let the engines
themselves know that these searchers like what they see (assuming
you’ve already dealt with the behavior points noted above). You
need to associate your site with specific communities that you know
your visitors are likely to be a part of. You also need to try to
get your site added to social bookmarking sites by people who are
likely to have common bookmarks with others who may search your
targeted phrases or related phrases.
Basically you want to make sure that
any connection you can help make between your site, your visitors,
and other potential visitors with similar interests or patterns as
your past/present visitors is established. This can be done by
asking visitors to bookmark you on social bookmarking site by
providing links to some of the popular bookmarking sites such as
Google
Bookmarks and del.icio.us.
This will help make bridges between your site and others by people
with similar interests. Getting links on industry-specific authority
sites is another useful way to tie your site to other quality
resources in your industry. To illustrate how Google would view
this: if authority site A links to related sites B and C and site D
is not linked to by site A Google can assume that if a visitor likes
site B then they are more likely to also like site C than the
unassociated random site D not linked to by the authority site A.
The value of a visitor. So how
to you get visitors that can positively affect the results to visit
your site? While there is no definitive answer to this question
there are a couple actions you can take to hedge your bets. The
first is sheer numbers. Not necessarily the most scientific of
answers but effective nonetheless. If you have 1000 visitors to your
site your odds that you have visitors who have a high degree of
PageRank assigned to them are much higher than if your site only
receives 50 visitors. Ranking for multiple phrases and pulling in
traffic from social bookmarking sites and authority communities are
great ways to help increase your visitor numbers from people
interested in the topic of your site.
Another way to attract high PageRank
users to your site requires thinking like a high PageRank user. What
type of person would visit related websites and view multiple pages
and/or spend reasonable amounts of time on those sites? What are
they looking for? How do they surf? What other sites do they visit?
If you can get an understanding of how they surf the web and what
they do on websites you’ll get a feel for what you need to do in
regards to site structure and keyword targeting to get them and keep
them on your site.
What Does All Of This Mean?
To understand what this all means we
need only reflect back on the title: SEO as we know it is dead.
SEO’s are going to need to develop new measurements for their
campaigns that reside outside of the direct ranking-reports of old.
New strategies to tie sites together and ensure that websites are
included in communities and that visitors react favorably to them are
going to become increasingly important.
What this means to the website owners
is that the workload on your SEO provider (or on you if you’re a
do-it-yourselfer) is about to go up and like all things, so too is
the cost. On the other side of the coin, you’re about to get
traffic from new sources and your site, by necessity, will be more
visitor friendly so your conversions will go up. So while the
workload and cost may increase, so too will the ROI.
In short, while the lives of SEO’s
are once again going the to get a little more difficult, the search
engines will benefit, their visitors will benefit, website owners
will benefit and so in the end, this is good for all of us.
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