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SEO Regionalisation

February 10th, 2009 by miromedia

Why do the more popular search engines favour regionalisation? Because localised results are more popular with users.

If, for example, a search engine user is looking for a ‘route planner’, they would most likely want one for their country. Results for another country would be secondary.

Another regionalisation example -

Google.co.uk top search results for ‘buying a car’

Autotrader (UK), fish for cars (uk), buyyourcar (uk)

A search engine’s primary function is to produce search results that are relevant to the user; otherwise the user would quickly move on to another search engine. You can see from the above results that Google favours regionalisation in its search results. This is because results for cars in ‘Peru’ or ‘Australia’ are not particularly relevant if a user is in the U.K.

Julian Wilkins

Password crazy

February 10th, 2009 by miromedia

Has the world gone mad I wonder?

It seems like everything has a password now. Everything is secret, for your eyes only, need to know basis, I could tell you, but I would have to kill you.

We are constantly told to - change our passwords regularly, don’t tell anyone our passwords, keep our passwords safe.

I wonder if the password has become the most valuable thing we own.

Julian Wilkins

New Chelsea boss - again

February 10th, 2009 by Andrew Male

Being a football fan, I like to keep abreast of the daily news. And what a week it’s been so far. It all change for the Premiership revolving doors and especially frustrated Chelsea. It strikes me that the boys at Stamford Bridge are having a crisis - one which is similar to a teenage girl that wants to be seen to go out with the most popular boy in the school. And, more surprisingly it appears that Avram Grant is about to be made the school team captain again - but we’ll have to wait and see on that one.

On a lightly lighter note. Has anyone noticed the similarity between Sam the Eagle of the Muppet Show and Avram Grant (below on the left)?

Avram or Sam?

Ian Hancock
MD and sports fan

The long and short of the tail

February 9th, 2009 by julianwilkins

I recently read an article published by The Times Online

According to their long tail theory

‘A study of digital music sales has posed the first big challenge to this “long tail” theory: more than 10 million of the 13 million tracks available on the internet failed to find a single buyer last year.’

Very interesting point, however this is not entirely accurate. Surely a better way to view this information is that 3 million different songs have been found and downloaded. And a better question might be - how many music shops have 13 million songs on their shelves?

Let me explain with a little more detail.

Finding a song, like many things, has become much easier using the internet. Buying one is easier too. And with online music retailers, like itunes, recording year on year sales increases, it is clear that more and more people are finding and buying music online.

Let us broaden the view from music to the whole internet search experience. Google’s latest stats do not back up The Times theory.

‘20 to 25% of the queries we see today, we have never seen before’.

So internet users are becoming more and more diverse in their searches as they become familiar with how search engines operate.

For example, once someone has used a search engine, would they search on ‘Golf’ if they wanted information on ‘Dunlop Golf Tees’. No one would go to the library and ask the librarian for ‘a book’ if they wanted Charles Dickens’s ‘A Christmas Carol’.

Dustin Woodard has done interesting research on the most popular search terms

‘It turns out that, at least in this particular three-month data set, the top 100 terms accounted for just 5.7 percent of all search traffic. Expand to the top 500, 1000, and 10,000 terms, and just 8.9 percent, 10.6 and 18.5 percent of all search traffic is involved, respectively’

With this in mind - Dustin Woodard says

‘This means if you had a monopoly over the top 1,000 search term across all search engines (which is impossible), you’d still be missing out on 89.4% of all search traffic. There’s so much traffic in the tail it is hard to even comprehend. To illustrate, if search were represented by a tiny lizard with a one inch head, the tail of the lizard would search for 221 miles.’

So search is alive, well and ever growing, despite what some articles may say.

Julian Wilkins

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