Its TV Portal is one of Yahoo’s strongest verticals. I personally check it out to get my fix of entertainment news from time to time. So, it is but logical for Yahoo to try to maximize the potential of Yahoo TV to generate site traffic and engagement to its site. Enter the Yahoo TV Shortcuts right smack into your entertainment-related search results pages. So when you search for an entertainment-related topic on Yahoo Search, the search results page will now display latest video clips, bonus videos or entire episodes, episodes lists, sho ratings, show times, photos – all coming from Yahoo TV. On the left side of the search results page you’d also find suggested links to information about celebrities, movies or TV shows related to the search terms you just entered. In addition, if you’re searching for a celebrity and that celebrity happens to have a Twitter account, Yahoo search will also display his or her tweets – call it a direct result of the Yahoo-Twitter content sharing deal . Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal . Yahoo Adds TV Shortcut on Search Results
Tag Archives: yahoo
Facebook Searches Grow by 10% in February
ComScore has just released its February search engine rankings data. And while there’s nothing new in terms of who is on top, who gained and who lost, what’s surprising about it is that among all the online properties where searches are conducted other than the five major search engines, Facebook gained a significant amount of searches in February. Yes, it seems that more search activities are happening on Facebook lately. Facebook’s total search queries may not be that significant compared to the top search engines, but then it was only the online property which registered search query growth in February – amounting to 10% increase from its January search market share. Total searches conducted on Facebook was 436 million while Google got 13.5 billion search queries, Yahoo got 2.5 billion and Microsoft sites got 1.7 billion searches. In terms of Core Searches though, Facebook is nowhere near the top five search engines where Google stays on top of the pact with 65.5% of searches, Yahoo with 16.8% and Microsoft Sites with 11.5%. Both Google and Microsoft had a slight increase in search market share in February with 0.1% and 0.2% respectively. Total searches in the U.S. amounted to 14.5 billion which is a slight 5% decrease compare with data in January. Google Sites got 9.5 billion of these searches, Yahoo got 2.5 billion and Microsoft 1.7 billion. Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal . Facebook Searches Grow by 10% in
SEO Wins & Sins: 5 Questions with Industry Leader Joe Laratro
Effective search engine optimization is equal parts art, science, and EXPERIENCE, so I sat down with industry veteran Joe Laratro to get the dish on what matters most in SEO. Joe is a recognized and leading expert in the Search Engine Marketing industry, and regularly speaks at industry events like Webmaster World, SMX, and Search Engine Strategies. He sits on the advisory board and is the lead moderator and speaker for PubCon . 1. What are the most common mistakes newbie SEOs make? Search Engine Optimization has changed over the years. I would say there are three distinct generations of SEOers: the meta taggers, the link builders, and the social media marketers. I have seen newbie SEOs try to choose one path for optimization. For long term success all areas and disciplines of Search Engine Optimization need to be addressed and made part of the ongoing strategy. Another newbie mistake involves trying old and dated spam tactics. I do quite a bit of teaching for the Industry. I am always surprised when someone hints at cloaking, or using white on white text. When I think about it, where is the history book on SEO? Newbie’s need a resource of what not to do and how to learn from the mistakes of Webmasters / Marketers / SEOers of the past. 2. On the flipside, are there common mistakes that experienced SEOs still make? I think to some extent experienced SEOs can make the same mistakes as my first point in question one. We cannot pigeonhole ourselves into only doing one type of SEO. Site architecture, optimized growing content, and natural link building are essential for success. I have seen SEOs that just focus on one area. If we look at link building, it is possible to rank for keywords without ever optimizing the main site. But will that cover the hundreds if not thousands of keyword variations that might drive traffic to that Web site? No. Benchmarking, analytics, and tracking SEO changes are more common problems. Clients come back and ask what SEO accomplished for the Web site? The numbers should be easy to prove – increasing search referrals and increased number of keywords driving those referrals. This has become even more important since Google’s announcement in December of 2009 of full time personalized search results. The last mistake that is fairly common does not happen because of the SEO professional. This problem lies in communication and tracking between marketing departments and technical departments. Unfortunately SEO work gets overwritten without anyone’s knowledge. It can be days, weeks, or even months until the issues are identified. Each department claims the other speaks Greek. Finger pointing flies, but the real loser is the Web site. SEO’s have to monitor their implementations. 3. What are 3 things marketers can do RIGHT now to improve their organic rankings? Have a solid technical infrastructure that is search friendly Have an ongoing content development plan to add new and useful content to the Web site Have a link building plan in place: target directories, social media sites, and related Web sites 4. What are the 5 most important elements of an effective search optimization practice? Write great subject based content – optimize the basics: title, meta description, alt tags, H tags, and links (anchor text) Make a link building plan, stick to it, and monitor it’s growth (hint – social media sites should be a large part of this strategy) Consider the value of internal linking when it comes to keywords and anchor text (navigation and in content links) Make sure the Web site is registered with Google Webmaster Tools, Yahoo Site Explorer, and Bing Webmaster Central. Regularly review for issues and new insights. Monitor Analytics for keyword performance and trends 5. After implementing an effective search optimization practice, how soon can marketers expect to see changes in the SERPs? Search Engines have become very adept at listing fresh content. The Search Engine Marketing community used to say wait 90 days to see the results. Some changes can occur much more quickly now. Personalized search also throws a large monkey wrench into seeing changes in the SERPs. I suggest monitoring Analytics for natural search growth and occasionally spot checking positions. Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal . SEO Wins & Sins: 5 Questions with Industry Leader Joe
Track Tsunami Warnings Online with NOAA, Twitter & Search
Earlier in the morning a major 8.8 earthquake hit Concepcion, Chile (a major university city) which has set off a Tsunami warning in the Pacific which reaches from California to Hawaii. According to MSNBC news, at 11 am EST, Hawaiians will wake up to an early morning Tsunami warning and evacuations of seaside areas. The major news networks are all covering the disaster in Chile, and Pacific reaction to the tsunami warnings, via social media feeds from residents in the Chilean area, and tweets from Hawaiians and locals from other Pacific islands. For those who visited this page looking for information on the Tsunami Warnings, here are some online resources to check the warnings in your area : NOAA’s Tsunami.gov NOAA’s Pacific Tsunami Warning Center Twitter is tracking the Tsunami warnings with the hashtag #Tsunami . Looking at the Twitter results, we can see that the Hawaii Red Cross is proactively reaching out to native Hawaiians via Twitter. Tsunami Warnings and Search Engines Looking at the major search engines; Google, Yahoo & Microsoft, we can see how fast the search engines are at covering the Tsunami warnings. Google is covering the Tsunami news results on a search for tsunami, but is not suggesting a search for Tsunami Warnings in the immediate search suggestions. This is a major issue with Google Suggest applying real time occurrences to its functionality. Once a user decides to search for “ tsunami warning s”, Google shows news results in Universal along with its Live Results of social media, news and blog coverage. Bing suggests to search for Tsunami Warning as soon as the user begins looking for the word Tsunami from the Bing homepage (actually, as soon as I type in “tsu”!). In the search results for “Tsunami Warning” Bing even suggests current news video coverage of today’s earthquake and tsunami, really hitting the nail on the head in terms of relevancy. Yahoo also does a very good job of directing the end user to the term tsunami warnings via Yahoo Search Assist and I like the way that the Yahoo News Shortcut instantly brings Twitter results into the picture without forcing me to scroll down the page like Google does for its social results. Currently I am doing a web video of the experience, but wanted to get this up as I wait for YouTube to complete the upload. Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal . Track Tsunami Warnings Online with NOAA, Twitter &
Google Starts Indexing Facebook Pages Updates
Although both Facebook and Google has not yet announced this officially, some folks are reporting that status updates from Facebook pages will start showing up on Google search results today. Of course, this comes hot on the heels of Yahoo’s announcement of their content-sharing deal with Twittter. And so the race to become a real-time search engine is starting to heat up. Google of course was ahead of the game as it incorporated Twitter updates to search results as early as December last year. While recently, it has also started incorporating MySpace status updates. But while Google’s deal with Twitter and MySpace includes status updates of members, the deal with Facebook is limited only to status updates of Facebook pages. Of course this is understandable since Facebook has a much closer ties with Microsoft Bing. And in case you’re not aware Facebook pages are basically accounts used for marketing and advertising purposes of consumer brands so, there’s really not much real-time in this regard since those Facebook pages are rarely updated after all. Makes me wonder right now, as to when Google will incorporate updates coming from Google Buzz to search results. Although I’m not really hoping that they would. Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal . Google Starts Indexing Facebook Pages