By: Chris Crum
Lately, Google has been placing a lot of emphasis on the importance of who you are on the web. That’s why they want you to use your real name on Google+ (or more broadly, your Google Profile).
This thinking certainly applies to search. This year, Google introduced authorship markup, which helps Google associate various content from a person with that person in search results, and ultimately gets that person’s profile prominence in Google search results. If you ever see a little image of a person off to the side of a search result, which is clickable (leading to that person’s profile), this is likely what you’re seeing.
It’s good for authors to gain exposure, and it helps readers establish some level of trust by simply knowing where a result is coming from (regardless of whether or not they actually trust any specific author). In fact, Google is so concerned about this, it doesn’t even want authors to have profile pictures that are the least bit unprofessional. For example, I know a guy who was using a picture of himself in his Halloween costume for his profile picture, and a Googler actually contacted him and asked him to change it. There was nothing bad about the picture, they just wanted a regular picture of him for his profile pic, presumably so people wouldn’t see anything goofy in the search results, and hurt the perception of Google’s rankings, even if the content it showed up next to was perfectly legitimate.
Google recently posted a pair of videos explaining how to implement authorship markup, if you need a bit of guidance:
It would appear that Google considers how many people you have in Circles on Google+ to be some indication of who you are now.
The Next Web says an unnamed source confirmed that the next step of Authorship Markup is to show the number of Circles you’re in on the search results pages. You can already see it in action for some people.
This actually makes the whole Circle limit thing a little more interesting. If you can only have so many people in your Circles on Google+, you’re not going to want to add just anybody right? In an article this week, we called for Google to get rid of Circle limits because it limits our access to information through Google+, but is this the mindset Google has here?
The bigger names on the web are going to have more connections, so if they can’t put every one of them into a Circle, they’re only going to want to put their top connections in there. I don’t know if this is the way Google is looking at things, but it raises an interesting point, especially with the attention that Klout has been getting (and now its new competitor Kred).
While we don’t know that the number of Circles you are in is a search ranking signal, it seems very likely. Remember, when Google was talking about authorship markup, they said they want to “get information on credibility of authors from all kinds of sources, and eventually use it in ranking.” It seems pretty logical that circle count could play a role.
If I’m wanting to get more Google search respect, I’m trying to get in more Circles.
Showing posts with label rankings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rankings. Show all posts
Friday, October 7, 2011
Google Shows Circle Counts for People In Search Results
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
SEO -Too Fast or Too Slow?
It's always a challenge getting top placement on Google. Many like to think their sites magically make it to page one without any hard work. There is a secret sauce we like to use for our clients in order to get them page 1 ranked. Typically we provide a competitive keyword analysis to get you started, and let you know which keywords you should be targeting for your business. Then we do our thing and Voila! Your site will start to make its way up the ranks. Part of the success is attributed to the hundreds of SEO tools offered online. It's definitely finding the right combination of tools and implementation to make things happen.
Let's be real, how long should you expect until you start to see results and moving up the ranks? Depending on how competitive your keywords are will determine how much work needs to go into the back-end. Sometimes you can go from page 2 to page 1 in Google in a few short weeks; sometimes it's days. If you are targeting a bunch of highly competitive keywords, it might take a few months before strategy lends itself to Rockstar placement.
Also pay attention to your sitemap; as you make updates to your site, your sitemap will change, and it's important to update it with Google. There are a plethora of Google webmaster tools to aid in getting things done when it comes to sitemaps, blogs, tracking, and more. When designing a new website, you must implement SEO tactics from the get-go. Don't wait because it's that much harder when you have to implement after you launch. The web design is everything as long as it's SEO friendly.
If you are employing all possible SEO efforts and you don't see any viable results, it might be time to contact a professional. SEO is more than fixing some onsite metadata. Keep that in mind and know that the value of good placement means everything as new visitors to your site equate to conversions.
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