Showing posts with label Search Engine Marketing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Search Engine Marketing. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Hummingbird and the Future of SEO and Link Building

Recently Google released their Hummingbird update to their search engine. This update was far more in depth than recent updates such as the Panda and Penguin updates, featuring re-tooling and behind the scenes updates of the search engine itself to help it perform smarter and faster. If you have been keeping up to date with all of the Google updates, you would know that the Panda update helped to remove bad content from search results and that Penguin pretty much removed low-quality links from search results. As Hummingbird has taken affect, we can only look into whether SEO and link-building will be non-existent in the future.

What is Hummingbird?

Hummingbird to marketers is similar to buying a new house with all new appliances as opposed to just painting your existing, older home. It helps to deliver more relevant results to users faster. Danny Sullivan, editor-in-chief of Search Engine Land, put it best:

In general, Hummingbird — Google says — is a new engine built on both existing and new parts, organized in a way to especially serve the search demands of today, rather than one created for the needs of ten years ago, with the technologies back then.

Essentially, Hummingbird was created to make everyone's lives easier through user experience improvements including:
-         Updates to the knowledge graph (comparisons and filters)
-          Conversational, cross-platform search
-          Better mobile search experience

Essentially, Google is making sure that the content that shows in the results are designed for the user, not for keyword-stuffed content.

Future of SEO

Whereas in the past, where results were delivered to the user based on keyword relevancy and link quality, the Hummingbird update aims to deliver the best results to the user based on the meaning behind the search query. For example, when someone is searching for "best hamburgers" on their desktop it may mean that they are looking for recipes, whereas if they are searching for "best hamburgers" on their mobile they may be looking for a restaurant nearby with the best hamburgers around. Conversational search is also playing a larger part of SEO, as Google hopes to answer user next question even before users type it in the search bar.

Future of Link Building

Although much of the "spam" link-building and low-quality content has been removed or punished by the Penguin and Panda updates, some still exists, and Hummingbird aims to remove it faster than the previous updates.  So how can marketers build links within these new updates parameters? Simply put, by building quality content that meets the specific needs of users and is in-depth. No longer are poorly written, low quality articles or blog posts going to be a factor in search results. Link building within the Hummingbird update is very similar to what marketers should have been doing before the update:

-          Developing high-quality, amazing content
-          Getting to know influencers in your space
-          Online community contribution
-          Asking friends to considering sharing content (when appropriate)
-          Bank on earning your links naturally


In the end, while Hummingbird has changed the way SEO and link building works, it has only urged and pushed marketers to adapt to a more timely and efficient way of serving users. Instead of creating keyword heavy content, marketers can now create high-quality and relevant content that will better serve the end users requests.

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

The Evolution of Search Marketing – From Keywords to Conversations

In celebration of Google's 15th birthday last week, we thought it would be appropriate to write about the history and future of search marketing. Our thoughts, ideas and processes have changed throughout those 15 years, as often as search algorithms have changed names and updates have been added. As we begin to fully digest the effects and updates of the Hummingbird update, we take this time to look where search is headed.

Keywords Change to Conversations

In the beginning, in order for a website to be found in the top search results, all a company had to do was insert keywords within the copy, meta description and so forth on their web pages. As Google continued to grow, their search algorithms became smarter, and so did technology. With the invention of personal assistants such as Apples' Siri, your voice and conversation became part of the search process. Through technology we no longer search for results relating to "Date Detroit was founded" on our mobile devices, instead we say "When was Detroit Founded?" this changes the way Google's search engine works. Through "conversational search" we are no longer just searching for results, but receiving a direct answer and response to the question via voice. Going further, we can begin to ask more in-depth questions, such as "Who was it founded by?" and receive the correct results. The magic here is that the search engine assumed the "who" in this case must be referring to the founder of Detroit based on previous searches.

Search Now One Step Ahead

When Google first started, visitors to the site would type in what they are searching for, hit search, and results would then be displayed. As Google grew, visitors looking to search for something would only have to type a word or part of a word to see instant results. Now, as we go to the Google page, the algorithm has an idea of where we are, what we have searched for, and the potential results to answers we have barely even typed or spoke of. As Google and technology continue to improve, Google founders expect that search will get even more integrated within the general public, including a possible implant in the brain, according to Google co-founder Sergey Brin.

The Future


As Google continues to improve upon its search engine, advertisers and marketers must realize the potential of everything they do and how they can relate to search results. For example, no longer does "Hump Day" signify just Wednesday within the search results, but also the Geico commercial and a camel, hashtag, and so much more. A search engine no longer provide you with links to other websites, but provides the relevant posts, pictures, videos and statuses from friends and family. The future of search is bright, and Google is leading the way. How is your company adapting?