Can Search Engine Optimization Survive Google?
by Chris Crum on January 16, 2010
The search engine landscape is ever changing. We covered that. However, while there are multiple players involved in facilitating that change, there is one that drives it far more than the rest of the competition. Obviously, we're talking about Google.
Is there a point where adapting to Google's changes becomes impossible? Share your thoughts.
To a very drastic extent, Google drives how the search engine marketing industry operates. With Google holding such a dominant share of the search market, it's not hard to figure out why. While some may tell you it's not the most productive use of your marketing time, businesses who hope to find success in driving people to their website (or even brick and mortar store) often hang on every word Google says and every change Google makes to its search engine and/or search results.
Liz Gannes with the tech blog GigaOm recently spoke with Google Engineering Director David Glazer about Google's approach to social for 2010. And we come back to that changing search landscape. Social plays a huge role in it, and Glazer acknowledged just that. Gannes reports:
In 2010, Google plans to expose and elicit more of the social network built into the tools that many of us already use — Gmail, Google Talk, etc. If you use Google products, the company already knows who your most important contacts are, what your core interests are, and where your default locations are. Glazer said to expect many product and feature launches that start to connect that information in useful ways.
"Everything is better when it knows who I am," said Glazer, who is responsible for working on developer platforms that include social aspects — a more distributed role than he had at Google in the past, Glazer said, when he was working on social exclusively. That's an improvement, he said, since social products are no longer siloed within the company.
What does "social" mean to Google? "Who I am, who do I know, what do I do," said Glazer. (emphasis added)
Back in October, Google released its experimental Social Search feature, which Google said would help users "find more relevant public content from their broader social circle."
Relevance of social search has been questioned though. WebProNews recently discussed search trends for 2010 and beyond with comScore's "Search Evangelist" Eli Goodman. Believe it or not, social search is counted among these trends, and he mentions such a lack of relevance in social search results.
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