- Driverless cars, paired with companies like Uber, will soon transport us about the city, offering us the extra time to revise our notes before an important business meeting.
- Leap-motion interfaces are available.
- Marketing has become personalized and targeted.
- We have experienced a loss of privacy in the name of a supposed greater safety.
In many respects, we can say that the future is (almost) now.
Of all the things that were presented in Minority Report, the one that most concerns us as SEOs and inbound marketers is the personalization of experiences that our potential customers have when looking for a product and/or information, when they share things online, and when they interact with our brands on our websites.
Search marketing and personalization
Personalization in search marketing is not something new—it was (re)launched on Google in 2005. Still, it was only with the launch of "Search, plus Your World" (January 2012), the rollout of the Venice Update (February 2012), and the introduction of Google Now (July 2012), that the personalization factor has become predominant.
If we ask everyday Google users about personalized search, though, this is what they answer:
This data from the excellent infographic on seotraininglondon.org reveals something that we might have guessed in talking about rankings with our clients: the average user does not know that their Google SERPs are personalized.
To tell the truth, we SEOs also tend to forget that search is almost always personalized, and we examine concepts such as, for example, neutral search.
For example, we tend to act this way when we try to understand the rankings of our sites or when we do competitive analyses. It is certainly not incorrect—it is a necessary starting point—but in reality, it is not enough anymore.
Take the case where our site is national or global: In that case, the personalization of the search experience is such that we should not only check how our site ranks in the U.S. or the UK, but we should also in smaller geographic areas of our targeted country.
At the same time, we should see who our competitors are with a "micro-geographic" focus. In fact, while we might be on the first page in a totally neutral search with its geographical center being the political capital of the country we are analyzing, maybe we don't rank so highly in the searches done in a city that we consider a target as important as the "nation" (i.e. Seattle or Manchester).
Why? Because the often shamefully forgotten Venice Update enhances the localization of the user performing a search in terms of how their SERPs are shaped. Hence, local businesses, which might not be relevant on a national/global scale, are indeed relevant locally. In those cases, they can be shown at the expense of "national" or "global" sites, which often do not possess sufficient relevance at a local level.
And that's personalization (note: in the concept of personalization I personally include context, because without it, personalization would provide a poor search experience).
But that's not the only way localization influences the personalization of search.
In fact, as both Tom Anthony and Will Critchlow explained well, localization (and other contextual information) is a key component of what they defined as "new queries," which include both a explicit and implicit aspect.
An even stronger implementation of personalization is possible: implicit-only queries, as they are defined by Baris Gultekin in this video interview shot at Google I/O 2013.
These queries are those that users don't even actually perform, but that Google predicts they are implicitly performing. The results are shown in Google Now cards:
In the first case (personalization due to geolocalization), we can try to acquire more relevance on a local level by creating events (online and/or offline), connections with local web sites, and partnerships with local influencers. Those influencers can be found with tools that geographically map social media followers/fans, such as Followerwonk (all the better if they are already connected with us):
Or, we can take advantage of the geographical segmentation of the people we have circled on Google Plus (and of the local communities' pages, if they exist):
In the second case ("new queries" with implicit and explicit aspects), we can try to "enter" in the personalized SERPs of our users, creating content that is contextually relevant to a topic + location + device. For now, though, it is quite hard to determine how, from where, and for what a user is already searching on our own sites via Google search. This information can't be easily understood with tools like Google Analytics, and Google Webmaster Tools does not offer us the opportunity to dig deeper than the country level. Hence, the best way to get this information is by actively obtaining feedback directly from our targeted audience.
In the third case (totally implicit queries), we can go with the classic SEO's first reaction of fright and ask to have our site integrated in the Google Now ecosystem, as Zillow, Booking, Urbanspoon and many others have already done.
Personalization and Knowledge Base
Last May, at Google I/O 2013, Amit Singhal said, "The search of future will need to answer, converse, and anticipate."
With "answer," he refers to the Knowledge Graph, with "converse" to Voice Search, and finally with "anticipate" to Google Now. Knowledge Graph and Google Now are based mostly on the so-called Google Knowledge Base, and in both cases—as well as in Voice Search—semantics and entity recognition play an essential role.
Semantics, entity recognition and the Knowledge Base, then, are the foundation on which Google can really achieve the goal of creating its dreamed-of Star Trek computer, capable of providing information to the user by predicting its needs for information.
As I wrote in a previous post here on Moz, the Knowledge Base helps Google by answering how and why the documents are connected and searched, as well as an understanding of what named entities those same documents cite and are related to.
The most evident examples of this are the Knowledge Graph boxes:
This snapshot, though, shows another example of personalization.
Google presented me Saint Peter the Apostle because in a neutral search I performed before, Google agnostically presented me all the entities the Knowledge Graph could relate to the query "Saint Peter".
As you can see, neutral "objective" searches still play a huge role in Google... but is this really so? No, it isn't.
Even in a neutral search, personalization of search is present. Here are a couple of examples:
Knowledge Graph disambiguation boxes in Google.it neutral search for "San Pietro"
Knowledge Graph disambiguation boxes in Google.com neutral search for "San Pietro"
Knowledge Graph disambiguation boxes in Google.fr neutral search for "Saint Pierre"
Knowledge Graph disambiguation boxes in Google.com neutral search for "Saint Pierre"
Localization of the users—both geographically and linguistically—plays an evident role in the personalization of search.
But that's not all. In fact—as I said before—personalization is always acting, not just when users are logged in. When you're not signed in, Google uses a cookie to personalize your search experience based on past search information linked to your browser.
The more someone uses Google for search, even logged out, the more Google understands and refines the search experience for that user. Knowing that there are about 5,134,000,000 searches performed every day, we can understand how the Google Knowledge Base is endlessly updating itself. That is not Big Data, that's Gigantic Data, all used for one purpose: to offer more personalized search and ad results.
How does Google personalize search?
Search History is surely the most important factor, but as we saw, localization has assumed an increasing relevance, especially because of the rise of mobile search.
Google seriously knows a lot about us. Crazypants! as a friend of mine would say.
How does search history shape the personalized SERPs, and how can Google strengthen the personalization of SERPs in relation to a query when search history is not present or is not sufficient by itself?
Google does this thanks to search entities, a concept that is explained in depth by Bill Slawski in this post.
Search entities, as described by Bill, are:
- A query a searcher submits
- Documents responsive to the query
- The search session during which the searcher submits the query
- The time at which the query is submitted
- Advertisements presented in response to the query
- Anchor text in a link in a document
- The domain associated with a document
The relationships between these search entities can create a "Probability Score," which may determine if a web document is shown in a determined SERP or not.
I warmly suggest you read Bill's post to find out more about all the possible relationships that can exist between these search entities, but for this post, I'd like to focus on these ones:
- The strength of relationships between these entities can be measured using a metric obtained from direct relationship strengths (derived from data indicating user behavior, such as user search history data) and indirect relationship strengths (derived from the direct relationship strengths).
- A relationship between a first entity that has insufficient support (e.g., not enough search history data) to associate a given property with the first entity and a second entity that does have sufficient support to associate the given property with the second entity can be identified, and the given property can be associated with the first entity with higher confidence.
Moreover, we could take advantage of the personalization of search thanks not only to being included in the personal search history of the users, but also to connections created with entities that are already in those users' search history. This connection can be a link, a citation, or a co-occurrence in a document, which is considered more relevant than the query alone or the search history of the users.
Somehow this is not something new. In fact, when Richard Baxter talks about doing really targeted outreach, we know it is good from the point of view of being discovered by the audience. Creating content for other sites that are used by the people influencing our target market will often result in new users of our own site.
But now, this patent about search entities is evidence that typically inbound tactics can have a direct reflection on a purely search-related level.
Semantic web
When we talk about entities, we usually think about people, places, and things (i.e., a brand). But web documents are also entities.
And, in light of what is described in the patent cited above, the "probability score" of a web document, which can determine its presence in a SERP or its visibility in results for a determined query based on all the classic on-page "ranking factors," can be improved by the use of structured data.
Structured data, from schema.org, Microdata and Open Graph, are important not just because they can gift our site's search results with a rich snippet. That snippet is the facade of something more important: helping the search engines better understand what a document is all about.
For instance, the breadcrumb schema is surely important because it can help add mini-sitelinks to our snippets, but it is even more important because it clearly tells search engines how the documents in our site are hierarchically related between them.
Or, using an even better example, the article schema is the only way (or at least so it is described by Google) to obtain visibility in the In-Depth Articles search blend.
Therefore, the use of structured data has become essential, not only because rich snippets offer us a greater visibility in the SERPs, but also because not many people are using it (36.9% of URLs use Open Graph, and 9.9% use Schema.org, as reported by Matthew Brown at MozCon). In addition, structured data can help increase the relevance of a document for a determined query simply because it "helps our systems to better understand your website’s content, and improves the chances of it appearing in this new set of search results."
The social layer
"Search, plus Your World" (SPYW), which de facto is how all logged in users use Google.com, can seriously help in outranking your competitors.
For instance, "The International SEO Checklist" by Aleyda on Moz ranks first for me and not third, because Aleyda and Gigi (and others in my Circles) plussed it. The "International SEO" Q&A page on Moz ranks third for me, simply because I have Moz circled. If it was not so, that page would not be present in the TOP 100, which we can see from a neutral search.
That means that, yes, in a personalized environment like SPYW, +1s have an impact in rankings, while that's not the case in a neutral search.
Even if SPYW is not present outside of Google.com, plusses still play a prominent role in how SERPs are personalized. For instance, if I search for "International SEO" in Google.es, and I am logged in, by default Google is showing me search results from Aleyda's posts, because they were all plussed by many people I'm circling on Google Plus. Instead, a neutral search in Google.es will show a completely different SERP.
The fact that we don't have the option to switch to a neutral SERP in Google.es (or in the other regional versions of Google) means that all logged in users, if they are active on Google Plus, see an extremely personalized search result page.
The first snapshot presents a logged in personalized search in Google.es for "International SEO". The second a neutral search. The influence of Google Plus in the first one is evident.
If we can find an evident social layer in search results, social media also has correlated values that can influence the personalization of the SERPs: branded keywords searches, prop-words, and an increase in search volume for our brand and related keywords.
In fact, we know that social media resides at the top of the funnel in the discovery phase. What we don't realize is that social is also present in a post-discovery phase, when users are searching for confirmations to their conversion intentions.
If we are very active on social, and moreover if we are able to create authority via social media, if we do our homework, and—as SEOs—if we optimize how content is shared socially (SEOcial), then we can instill in our audience those keywords and topics for which they will search for us later on.
Email marketing and personalization
We can also influence the personalization of search with the integration of email marketing to our SEO activities.
We usually tend to consider email marketing just another channel—a very good one if performed correctly, because it can offer great conversion rates and huge amount of organic traffic, but we rarely think at it as a way to obtain visibility in search.
Now that is possible.
For totally implicit queries, we can mark up the emails we send to our users with schema.org for GMail.
The reminders we offer to our users will be presented as Google Now cards on mobile, but these annotations will also allow users to perform (voice) searches, which will deliver those same reminders created from the information we have marked up in our email.
For all the other kinds of queries, it is also possible to use email marketing in order to have visibility in the SERPs.
If you are a tester of the Gmail Search Field Trial (and use Google.com based in the US), you should see these enhanced results in your SERPs:
As you can easily tell, emails relevant to a user's search can be shown in the SERPs.
This opens a completely new area of SEO activity, in which potential factors are:
- Who you email: If you email John Doe a lot, it’s likely that messages from John Doe are important.
- Which messages you open: Messages you open are likely to be more important than those you skip over.
- What keywords spark your interest: If you always read messages about soccer, a new message that contains those same soccer words is more likely to be important.
- Which messages you reply to: If you always reply to messages from your mom, messages she sends are likely to be important.
- Your recent use of stars, archive and delete: Messages you star are probably more important than messages you archive without opening.
I am not guessing these GMail ranking factors; I took them from this patent by MailRank now owned by Google.
Conclusions
Luckily Amit Singhal is present in this snapshot, or many of you would have started getting crazy with me.
Amit Singhal is right when he says that "Answer," "Converse," and "Anticipate"—deep personalization of search, I called it—is going to change search as we know it.
Is this maybe the reason why the Search Team at Google is now called the Knowledge Team? Is this maybe the main reason for "Not Provided" keywords, as Will Critchlow mentioned?
What I know is that personalization is already so heavily present in search that avoiding it in the name of a fading neutral search is not doing good SEO.
Moreover, personalized search is clearly telling us how SEO alone is not enough, but that content, social, and email marketing by themselves are also not enough to obtain a real and complete success in Internet marketing.
SEO, for instance, needs social to help people discover a site, just as social needs SEO to reward its activity with recurring conversions on the site.
Personalized search is pushing us to hasten the destruction of silos between Internet marketing disciplines, and hopefully it will oblige marketers to change and embrace a more holistic way of promoting a business online.
Maybe with the rise of deep personalization SEO will finally become Search Experience Optimization, and have users at its center instead of search engines.
Now, Google is behind you, with you and before you! Google products are making our life better and better. And, We have very good experience.. We can't spend single day without following one... (~May be via desktop or via smartphone)
Generally, We are saying that, We are crazy behind Google. But, We can say that... Google is crazy behind us and following us... Just visit dashboard.... A level of craziness of Google for us...
Now, I can understand that: Why Google Adwords gives us more conversion than any other paid campaign. Because, Google is designing fabulous model to pick accurate product or service for us...
If I am searching for Moz or Martha Stewart blog on Google ... And, If Moz and Martha Stewart are working on display network ad so Google will not miss chance to display that banner during my internet surfing... This is my very basic understanding regarding personalized search... Am I Right?? :) :)
And soon there will be free internet access from Google ... They are making some very smart moves from a business perspective.
Imagine how Google can improve our lives when they track us at the ISP level! *sarcasm*
The articles from you, Will, and Tom really make me consider the possibilities of implicit search. It's an aspect that myself and others often don't consider, that we should be paying more attention to. Interested in how this factors into Google Glass as well, I can see Google pulling all kinds of biometric data to inform implicit search. I had never really thought about semantic markup playing a role in Google's ability to personalize as well. Great Post!
Yup, you're right citing Google Glass, even though I consider it as just another "sensor" of the many Google may use in order to offer a personalized search experience (just think at the Google Driverless Car: a giant mobile sensor...)
Google's acquisition of behav.io and the work that the MIT startup has done with using sensor data for individuals and in an aggregated manner(such as sensors knowing when people have come into close physical proximity to each other due to things like blue tooth handshakes) adds another element to this as well.
If our phones are capable of doing things like telling that we are coming down with a cold a couple of days before we do from gyroscopes and other mechanical electrical sensors (from a slowness of our gait and an awkwardness of our movements) and can do the same for others whom we might have actually come into contact with, it can understand the spreading of epidemics. If our phones have access to our contact information as well, and our web usage, it can understand better how memes spread across the Web.
The predictive algorithms used in applications such as Google Now aren't limited to individual actions, but also potentially aggregated activities as well, and that can have a tremendous impact upon personalization and contextual (and parameterless) searches as well.
It's interesting you should mention that Bill, was just reading about herd immunity raising concerns in some pockets in Texas, and how certain diseases such as measles can take advantage of herd immunity of as high as 90ish percent. Be a powerful tool to curb that.
Beyond your specific example, it's crazy what even an average user can glean about real world activities just crunching social data.
"it can understand the spreading of epidemics" . . . That's incredible to imagine and would be a great source of data for public health organizations.
...or a walking stick, as Bill eloquently explains here. Just another Google sensory organ attached to its wiry tendrils. Glass is foremost in my mind because I want one. ;)
Totally agree with you Jeremy, search is seriously evolving and personally I can't wait for Glass to come out and change it again! Maybe they'll make it so they base choices of the likes of eye colour, height and so many other factors, which is seriously cool! but also a bit scary at the same time... The guys who show us what the new search is looking like (as Jeremy already mentioned Gio, Tom etc) are really pushing us even furhter into the new era, GOOD JOB!
This is so exciting and so disturbing at the same time. I'm envisioning Google Glass evaluating a conversation you're having, noticing your pupils dilate, equating that to a certain emotion, and suggesting ways for you to extricate yourself from whatever "situation" you're in. If it's correct and done well, it could be a significant change in social dynamics. If it's wrong, it could end up with the Glass unit in many pieces on the floor. =)
The really interesting thing, in my mind, is what happens when it's actually correct, but your human tendency for denial makes you disagree. "Of course I'm not uncomfortable talking to this potential date," you might tell yourself -- and you might become furious with Glass for suggesting you are -- even though it's actually right. This raises a fascinating dilemma for Google -- what happens when people actually don't want "correct" information?
Worth listening again to this TED talk about personalization – what we want and need from search and the web as opposed to what Google or FB want or need (sell ads of course).
https://www.ted.com/talks/eli_pariser_beware_online_filter_bubbles.html
Thanks for linking to it.
I didn't mention it because - sincerely - it was not the main focus of my post.
Gianluca, WELL DONE! You nailed it!
As you said, the average person has no idea, especially clients and the C-Suite. I ask every client to use the Unpersonalized Search Plugin.
The best part is this forces marketers to get into the minds of the audience and personas. Search Experience Optimization FTW!
You're totally right, and - as I talked about an holistic vision of Internet Marketing - SEOs could craft quite precise personas - for instance - using the Ad Platform of Facebook and its Graph Search.
Real people with real tastes and likes, real demographic with which creating personas on a very granular level, even geographically... so you will be able to create a real personalized targeting also on your own site.
I'm continually amazed at how few of us realize the level of involvement Google has in our search results. The specificity is something I enjoy, particularly for local search, but I wonder if over time many of us become less enamored and more alarmed at Google's reach.
RS
Couldn't have said it better myself. As a consumer, I enjoy the specificity of personalization for local search, but as marketers it can definitely make our jobs a little more challenging!
Great post...Your end statement:
"Maybe with the rise of deep personalization SEO will finally become Search Experience Optimization, and have users at its center instead of search engines"
I really hope so. Even though Google already says: "Think of users and not search engines" plenty of websites are optimised solely around the chasing of Google Algorithms and do not consider users at all (or very little). Annoyingly for many it works still - It really shouldn't.
I saw a statement the other day (can't remember where or it exactly so i'm paraphrasing):
"Google's campaign to clean up search results is like the governments war on drugs, Google show us all the high profile cases where they've caught offenders (In the hope they'll scare those tempted away) but there's plenty still going on - and its working for them."
I hope the age of personalisation will help naturally clean up search results and give us a better experience.
I think search personalization will be one of the biggest areas of opportunity that Google pursues in the coming years. They seem to be doing a big push to personalize results based on every implicit & explicit piece of info they have on you. And lord knows that over time they're only likely to collect even more data points than what they currently do now.
Thanks for the post Gianluca. You really got the topic well covered. From my humble point of view I must say I'm not very happy (as a Google user, not as an SEO) about the way search results are being selected/displayed these days, and I see I'm not the only one here. I find Google purposes in this matter a bit too 'invasive' since I am not always looking for results they assume I want. As an SEO practitioner though more often than not I appreciate facing new challenges. We'll see where does all this lead to. Cheers!
You're right, Javier.
I like search personalization from an SEO point of view, but not as an user.
You've chosen a good word: invasive. But, for me, the problem comes from another perspective: what if I'd like to see other results than those shown by Google? Why DO I have to see those results?
At the end, all is an Adwords' strategy. But this should not demoralize us in our efforts to do good SEO.
As Mark Traphagen suggested on Google Plus, answering to a very similar question inspired by this post, if we know that Google is personalizing our results so deeply, maybe the only correct thing to do is starting to follow in G+ people, who objectively are considered authorities in the most different topics we may be interested about.
Said that, neutral "objective" search still is present whenever we perform a search for the first time and/or we don't have a robust search history related to it.
By the way, as well explained by Bill Slawski in the post I cited, Google will present us new "related" content" also in the cases we have a search history related to a query, being the probability that this new documents will be shown based over the affinity with the documents we have already consulted, over the freshness (if it QDF) and many others factors.
I am commenting on Moz blog after a long time (the last time I commented it was SEO Moz :)) and love the new pop that you have implemented for logging in while trying to comment. Much better than earlier where you needed to go to a separate landing page to login and then comment.
Coming to the point of personalization, I would like to mention a post by Dan Petrovic on how Google would like the future of search to be like. Its a search that takes semantic search and user data to an altogether different level.
The evolution of Google Glass and personalization will present new challenges to the field of SEO and one will have to take a holistic approach towards internet marketing as a whole.
Personalization has its own pros and cons. Sometimes as a user I want to search for information for my query from new different sources, but personalization kills my idea. It shows you same sites again and again which you already know or visit on regular basis. Here it restricts you from reaching out to new sources, where a search engine needs to help you with that.
In many aspects its useful for you when you need quick information nearby your location, like in case where you are looking for restaurants, movies, etc.
Hi Gianluca,
i had written about "Site Experience Optimization" and/or "Site Ecosystem Optimization" in September 2012 on my blog, here: https://www.millestanze.it/myblog/index.php?itemid=191&catid=24
It is not a very technical article but it contains some ideas that I think I can find also in your; maybe you can tell me if you find something interesting...
Thanks,
bye bye!
I really like the term "Search Experience Optimization" as it also reminds of the fact that rankingsare based on user experience factors more and more. All personalization moves of Google put together (including the new Keyword Planner registration obligation), one could say there is a substantial shift from relying on external data as collected from full text of web sites and link graph and structure (external recommendations), to rely more or mostly on internal data, put together from personal profiles (i.e. from locations and communications) and surf profiles of websites (incl. data such as time of stay, number of visited pages, returning visitors...). So "Search Experience Ranking" even could mean more than localization and communication profiles included.
As the new Keyword Planner urges every keyword marketer to register for an account, Google will be able to collect even more personal profile data.
I've written an article about this shift in German on "Why Google is no full text search engine any more".
Google now appears as a personal suggestion machine rather than the old full text search engine. If you don't use (very) private search.
I'm very curious about what you think about it.
Very Informative and insightful post. Thanks for sharing. Your analysis is really impressive. Looking forward for some more interesting posts from your end.
Great post, Gianluca! I think is easy to forget about personalized search results, even for SEOs; I doubt many people outside the industry are familiar with the concept.
Took me a while to read the whole article but i think it was worth it. I had no idea things have progressed this much. However, like in all things i guess, there are good and there are bad aspects.
This was an indepth study.Thanks for sharing the knowledge.
Awesome article. I can't wait to see where search will take us. Such personalisation as shown in that Minority Report clip is scary. But I guess it won't be once it is the norm.
With the rise of personalized search, it is more important than ever to first understand your audience and then become authorities in their eyes. From there you can build a ripple effect that will grow your reach. The benefit of this is it will also rank you in the eyes of a more targeted audience.
How have I missed this article up til now???? Very succinctly worded - I'm going to share this with the team for discussion at Mondays meeting. Much appreciated.
Gianluca, great job! You nailed it! How do you feel about we are helping Google get rid of our websites?
as Google commands all your post is so interesting especially for us less skilled...i do focus on the content on where I want to be and get help with the technical ...i do wonder whether our web sites will at all be relevant in search results in the future...excellent read. thank you
Wow! It's also my first time to recognize that there is a personalization in search marketing. As an online marketer, each of us should apply this new method because it can actually help us to have a successful online business.
All I can say is I most really confuse Google, because what they show me is certainly not personalised.
Amazing post guys! Thanks a lot.
I think Google personalization is killing us. I have discussed it with hundred of bloggers, they are saying they are facing the drop in traffic from Google, because of new Google personalization search. What should be the strategy for facing this situation? Anyone here can suggest?
They need to use some sort of "search without personalization" button after you hit your first query. Because if you living in a small town and searching for something in other language, search engine can seriously harm you with searching only in "reservation"(i mean geographical personalization or domain priority. Sometimes it's really painfull to search for some things in english when you using google from Russia)
Gianluca, I just wanted to thank you for so elegantly communicating something I have been trying to get across to my team for months. I just forwarded a link to this post to everyone here. It's interesting, I came to SEO after being immersed in Internet Marketing in general so going back to an "un-siloed" type of Internet Marketing isn't a new concept. I started out as an affiliate marketer, then moved into email marketing, then helped a company start a niche business for which I was solely responsible for all online marketing efforts and then did the same for another company, My SEO has always been holistic really, ranging from writing & implementing full-blown Internet marketing business plans to grepping server logs. Honestly, the technical aspects of SEO (I'm still an API moron) have been the hardest for me to tackle. Fortunately, it seems that going forward technical SEO will become less and less of an issue and the creative part of SEO will become more and more important. Would you agree with that?
Hi Dana,
I think I agree with you, but I would warn you from forgetting the importance of technical SEO.
While it is true that the creative part of SEO (let's say, its marketing facet) is more and more important (as it was important before too, to tell the truth), on the other hand strong technical SEO skills are even more needed.
Just looking at the topic of this post, you can see how Schema.org and the structured data are essential; and that's technical SEO.
I really liked your article and it provided a summary of schema for email, which I will definitely be using for my company's next email campaign? I think many business owners do not know about personalization and localization of SERP's. A good example is a company whose SEO I recently took over in a very competitive industry. They thought they were ranking high for their keywords, but could not figure out where their web traffic had gone. Once I hid their IP and did a search again the results were clear.
hello sir..i am very worry..my site was in top of Google result in some keywords and i got 2k+ visitors daily.but in last 6 days i saw a huge decrement in keyword position as well as organic traffic??
can you please tell me what is going on with me?is there any thing which is overlook to me
my site is www.smsbrunch.com
please tell me..
i am waiting for your reply.
this is not the place for asking help for your site. Please do it in the Q&A section of Moz.
First thing first - your comment isn't relevant to the post here.
Second - The first fold of your site is full of Advertisements. The left panel has sms categories (fine). But the whole home page shows just one "funny sms" and nothing else worthwile for the visitor. Try to make your website useful for the visitors.
There could be many other reasons for the drop and you could be the best judge to determine the shortcomings.
"A most revealing piece on SEO personalization I must remark. There are lots of interesting details discussed by Gianluca Fiorelli in this post. I guess these have been expounded in this post. I am still wondering if SEO in the future is still going to emphasize on personalized search. Only time will tell, and I believe the future is already here!"
Who cares if users don't want Google to personalize the SERPS.
That's like the guy holding the sign telling the government to keep their hands of his medicaid.
I do get worried any time a machine wants to guess what i'm thinking. Like everything in life, balance is needed. If google and marketers can maintain that balance, the future of personalized SEO looks promising. Just be careful consumers are becoming more savvy everyday and will eventually start getting upset if they think they are being overly marketed to.
I think the issue here and solution is very simple, how can everyone with so many different interests be satisfied with one solution? The branching off to satisfy everyones needs is a viable business move, not just for Google but for every single business.
Really do think that the level of analysis here is extraordinarily impressive.
But surely when you or I search we want the most relevant results, not the most academically worthy, as judged by a mathematically guided robot!
One word for this post! Comprehensive! And yes things have changed radically. Implicit and explicit sides of search queries come into picture due to personalisation of Google results.
Wow! you were right on Twitter yesterday, a very long post... but amazing too ;-)
I've been thinking about personalization in search for a very long time and, as you say, personalized results are the definitive proof that SEO must not be alone in this crazy world of online marketing. Can we really imagine us doing content optimization without social activity? And if we do content optimization, isn't this part of content marketing?
I'm obsessed with one term: taxonomy. And the reason is very clear: we all are obsessed with the need of giving to everything a name, a closed name. And this is an 'old fashioned' trend. In the world we live all is influenced by all. I accept that we must define concepts, but we've been doing in the wrong way: 'X is X, and no more' or 'Y means yyy'.
Be patient, all this madness has a goal.
For me, personalization in search is a need, and a need for SEO. If we don't want anyone doing SEO, if we desire a quality SEO (named 'search engine optimization' or 'search experience optimization'; taxonomy again), we need challenges, new ways to improve our skills and, finally, to do what we love so much: 'S', 'E', 'O', that excentric and evolving discipline that drives us crazy but give us the great feeling of doing something superb when it's well done.
Thanks for the post.
Implicit search has been with us for quite some time in the recommendation algorithms of companies like Amazon, Netflix and Lovefilm. These are seriously important mechanisms to grow business, which is why they lavish such engineering resource upon them and run competitions to crowdsource their improvement e.g. https://www.netflixprize.com/
The implication of this shift for marketing teams and particularly those involved in "SEO" is that we need to understand and analyse how information connects. I think in the next few years, the smartest marketers will be the ones who understand network analysis and so can spot and influence patterns in user groups, web links, product recommendations and more.
Thanks for the post @Gianluca!!! We see personalized search results becoming more predominant as Will touched on his WBF https://moz.com/blog/the-future-of-user-behavior-whiteboard-friday.
How do you feel about we are helping Google get rid of our websites?
We're implementing markup like Schema.org to help Google indexing better out website, true, but what is also happening is that all this personalisation, Knowledge Graph are reducing if not completing removing traffic from our websites.
Let's take for example queries like "What is my IP" or "Weather forecast Zürich". Imagine the traffic drop that the guys from whatismyip got when Google started to answer to that question on the SERP.
At the end, Google final goal isn't it to provide one exact result?
I understand your concern, as it is mine too.
But, is that useful for us to stick in a "What the hell Google is stealing all my space and traffic!!) attitude.
I don't think so, because few ten thousands SEOs won't make change Google.
So, I would start asking myself other questions: if Google, with its answers cards is stealing traffic to my site, I have to ask myself: was that traffic really useful. Of course, maybe it was if all my site economy was based over ads impressions, but, even if it was so, that wasn't really a great business plan.
If Google has become our competitor for cheap easy answers (as "what is my IP"), then let's consider Google as another competitor.
What Google may I offer to users that answer card by Google cannot? For instance, for that question Google just tells me the IP address, but no any other deep information I may be interested about. As an SEO, i.e., I could be interested what sites share the C-Class of that IP. Hence a "whatismyip" kind of site could offer me that valuable information and with it being able to obtain a more qualified and "returning" organic traffic.
I agree with much of what this great article states. It's ironic, I used the Bread Crumb trail analogy about a hour ago; however it was pointed out first to me over 2 years ago, by a mentor who understood the Semantic Side of SEO pre Panda and are Penguin 2.0
Do I like that Big G tracks my preferences? No! Do I use www.hidemeass.com regularly as I do "Incognito" on Chrome. I understand wanting to make the "Experience Better", just as I understand the term, "One Every Minute", may be a understatement.
This post was brought to my attention via G+; however when I saw it was MOZ the breadcrumb turned into a "Nugget", Thanks for taking the time to share. Your thoughts, and methodology are appreciated.
Respectfully,
Bill Hubbell
useful knowledge, I will try to take advantage of
Really like it.Perfect post man.The start is so great.Let some one stay here.Minority report.OO how close we are to that thing. The most important point is that other than online GURU's I hardly see a few bunch of people that knows Google takes a lot and lot of info from their searches.Do you ever see ads on different sites.Your searches are about Travel they will keep on giving you travel ads on different sites that you visit.I think its not 64% surely more are not aware of it.
Its Very Informative post