Tag Archives: google

Optimizing for (not provided)

If you see "https" in your Google url, you are affected by this.

Last month Google made a significant announcement that literally shook the SEO community. To sum up, if a user is logged into Google, their default connection will now be secure. Not a big deal in itself, but search marketers now lose the ability to see which organic keywords brought traffic and led to transactions.

For example:

If someone searched for “web designers, in Charlotte NC” through a secure connection on Google, that traffic would now be lumped in to the (not provided) category.

We know they came from Google. We just don’t know what they typed into Google to get to us. Read More

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Google’s New Plus One Service

See that little button to the left? That’s new from Google; it’s called Plus One (+1) and the world of internet marketing is buzzing. This is Google’s latest foray into social media after failing miserably with Google Wave and the privacy nightmare that was/is Google Buzz. At Alter Imaging, we took an early test drive of the new Plus One service by signing up and installing the +1 buttons across our site. We’ve only begun but here’s what we’ve discovered so far:

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Google’s Site Preview Going Mainstream

Google Search resultsAt Alter Imaging, we keep an eye on new developments with Google’s search results page. The last few months have seen huge changes with the introduction of instant results and, more recently, the incorporation of local results into the non-sponsored section.

Google is trying to make us search smarter and faster. If we search smarter, we find what we want and thus keep coming back to Google for more answers. If we search faster, Google gets to display more ads. In essence, Google wants to increase average ticket size (number of searches) and frequency (how quickly we revisit)…just like any other business.

Google’s latest development is the ability to view previews of of a website by mousing over its search result. This feature is currently available on the Chrome browser. Edit: It now is appearing on Firefox, too (but with a slightly different implementation).

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