Blog

  • 5 For Friday — Links, Stories & Posts For Your Weekend

    How SEO Can Work With Content Strategy — TopRank

    While much of SEO is focused on the technical aspects such as linkbuilding and algorithm reputation, the quality of website content itself is of at least as much importance. TopRank’s Lee Odden and Content Specialist Margot Bloomstein give you the skinny about how organizations can reach and engage their audience through careful content development, producing an end product that’s “Findable, Readable, Understandable, Actionable and Shareable.”

    Think Blogging is a Dead-End for Your Small Business? — Search Engine Journal

    If you’re a small business interested in online expansion, you may be wondering if setting up and regularly maintaining a blog is worth the effort. While the motivations for blogging can be radically different from establishment to establishment, the end goal is the same: to target your customers. This article discusses the many advantages of blogging and how to avoid some common pitfalls such as failing to consistently update with fresh content, analyze the blog’s metrics or respond to user feedback.

    How to Tweet From Your Archives Without Pissing People Off — Graywolf’s SEO

    Do you have a large backlog of interesting, pertinent archived content that you want to expose to new users or followers? In this handy how-to, Michael Gray explains the ins and outs of grooming your list of selections to create a sleek and multi-faceted campaign to get your older content maximum exposure.

    IT and SEO Teams Should Work Together — SEO Chat

    All too often SEO and IT professionals end up at odds throughout the course of a project, slowing work progress and creating discord in the team. SEO Chat’s Terri Wells gives examples of some common causes of this friction, as well as tips on how to resolve the problem and create well-functioning team in which all facets collaborate and respect each other.

    Bing Unfolds a New Set of Finance Tools — ProNet Advertising

    If you’re a NASDAQ news junkie who’s considering making the switch to Bing, you’re in luck. The Microsoft-driven Google competitor has unveiled a whole new suite of financial tools designed to allow you to keep track of social stock conversations, display recent news stories applicable to your researched companies and share decisions to buy, sell or trade via a Facebook widget. By aligning itself with well-established third parties in the sphere such as Seeking Alpha and StockTwits.com, Bing has created a hithero-unseen conglomerate of resources designed to get you every bit of financial information you could ever ask for in a single service. Click through to get the goods on how this social search bigwig is turning its focus to Wall Street.

  • Pittpatt Puts Google Acquisitions To 100

    Thursday, Google acquired Carnegie-Mellon University spinoff project PittPatt, which specialized in facial recognition software for businesses like GE. We’ll be a bit naïve here and take Google at their word when they claim they won’t implement full facial recognition software without “strong privacy protections” and intentionally excluded the feature from Google Goggles. It seems clear that Google will use the technology to enhance video quality and would otherwise be caught in crass doublespeak during a time to play it straight.

    It is striking that Google seems utterly unfazed by two government commissions investigating it for its aggressive vertical integration into niche search and social media.

    PittPatt marks the hundredth merger by Google, the sixteenth this year. For comparison, the slightly older and smaller Yahoo has acquired 64 companies and the more traditional technology company Microsoft purchased 144, both with only two acquisitions over the past seven months.

    Google seems to be almost thumbing its nose at both European and American investigators. Not only are they explosively expanding and refining their social tools, they are reinforcing use of Google properties on Maps and de-emphasizing other sites’ role in local search. Google is even boasting its wide variety of overt technologies by giving the user everything they could love (with a layout ripped from a Mahalo demo video) even as they take away a line of customer interaction with the company.

    Of course companies change, and to be mired in chasing the FTC algorithm would be much more likely than and as damaging as wrongdoing being found by the inquiry. Even more important is that these acquisitions allowed Google to provide a wide range of products, most of which were cobbled together from multiple targets’ technology. But is Larry Page’s aggressive business strategy going to engender the company to the FTC during the Google Antitrust case?

    Check back tomorrow for an informative infographic from SI’s own Joe Luft on the situation!

  • Google Isn’t Bowing Down

    So, in case you haven’t heard, there was a major update to Google Places late last week. My Friday was filled with confusion, frustration and a feeling of something worse to come. It was sort of like a David Lynch movie with a Local twist. Now that the smoke has cleared, one question remains. What is Google up to?

    Google Places Update

    Before I get into the possible reasons for this update, here is a rundown of the most prominent changes that have been made to business listings on Google Places.

    • Google reviews are the only ones to include snippets now.
    • Third-party reviews have been relegated  to a  “Reviews from around the web” section at the bottom of the page.
    • Third-Party citations have been removed completely.
    • A big red “Write a review” button has been added in two prominent positions.
    • The “More about this place” section is gone.
    • The “What people are saying” section has been replaced by “descriptive terms”.

    Now, back to the question-at-hand. What is Google up to? The Wall Street Journal’s Amir Efrati suggests that Google is bowing down to it’s competitors under growing pressure from the FTC’s antitrust investigation. Saying that, by removing third-party reviews from Places pages, Google is distancing itself from the claims that they “steal” content from the likes of Yelp and Citysearch, post it on their own Places pages, and give those pages preferential rankings in search results. While I see where Amir is coming from, I don’t think that Google is bowing down at all. Quite the contrary, actually. I believe that Google is putting their attack plans into motion.

    Google was initially designed to index third-party content in an easily searchable and user-friendly format. By removing third-party citations and review snippets and promoting their own reviews in what is usually the #1 ranked search result within it’s own #1 ranked search engine, Google has formatted their local search results in a way that obviously favors their own content over that of their rivals. This is the exact reason why the FTC is investigating Google in the first place.

    In other words, Google isn’t interested in displaying reviews from Yelp, Citysearch, and other prominent sites, they want to make those reviews obsolete. If you look at the changes to Google Places from this perspective, it doesn’t seem like Google is that worried about the FTC’s investigation. With all that money they are spending on federal lobbying, I guess Big G thinks they’ll come out on top like Microsoft did in the 90’s.

    Ultimately, not much has changed when it comes to what really matters… getting results. Google Places is still the holy grail of Local SEO. There haven’t been any reported drops in rankings due to this update, so no major algorithm changes are believed to be involved. This means that while Google may not be displaying third-party reviews and citations, they still matter when it comes determining the rankings of local search results, for now.

     

  • 5 For Friday — Links, Stories & Posts For Your Weekend

    4 Reasons Why Contests Should Be Part of Your Marketing Strategy — Mashable

    While contests and sweepstakes can be intensive campaigns to undergo, they can have an enormous impact on your customer base and should be part of every media marketer’s toolbox. Check out Ben Pickering’s concise list of four reasons why you should consider one today.

    Google Overhauls Place Pages, Emphasizes Reviews & Kills Citations — Search Engine Land

    Google’s recent overhaul of their Place Page system and elimination of third-party review snippets has set a lot of tongues around the SEO community wagging. Check out this article for a brief overview, but be sure to come back next week for Joseph Henson‘s in-depth review of the change.

    YouTube SEO – 5 Step Formula To Dominate YouTube & Google — Tom Breeze TV

    YouTube videos have enormous potential for attracting traffic, but are consistently underrepresented in the optimization community. This handy video from Tom Breeze gives a step-by-step explanation of just how valuable video content can be to you, as well as tips to engage the community and divert traffic to your site.

    Google Adds URL Parameter Options to Google Webmaster Tools — Search Engine Land

    Google has added a feature enabling webmasters to specify how URL parameters can communicate how content is viewed on a webpage for sorting, filtering and pagination purposes (among many others). SEL’s Vanessa Fox has the technical details and the nitty-gritty on what this means for your site configuration.

    38 Million in US Purchase Under Influence of Social Media — Social Times

    While you probably already knew that social media marketing holds a large influence over consumer behavior, it’s only now coming to light how strong a grasp this really is. The purchase decisions of a staggering 38 million 13 to 80 year olds in the United States are now influenced by social media, and the number is growing — up 14% in the last six months. Check out this study and see how you can be making the “ripple effect” work for you.

  • Influencer Profile: Paula Keller

    New Orleans born and raised, SI’s own Account Manager Paula Keller was thrilled to get connected with a growing company in a growing industry after graduating from Louisiana State University with a degree in Marketing. With a strong interest economic development and a goal of being a part of the revival of big business in the city she’s always loved, she realized during this very interview that she’s fulfilling that goal by working at Search Influence. Not only does Paula work with an expansive variety of clients across the county, she also has the opportunity to work with some great local companies, including Audubon Nature Institute and Archon Information Systems.

    Paula bringing the party as always!

    Let’s start with the important stuff: if you were a pastry, what kind of pastry would you be?

    A chocolate glazed donught from Dorignac’s. It’s an old fashioned classic that’s always in style.

    What is it that you do around here? What kind of skills do you find yourself using throughout the average workday?

    While my new business card doesn’t list a title, I’m officially an Account Manager. You could also call me a Keywordsmith, Google Place Page Perfectionist, and Package Crafter. I do a little bit of everything. I think that is pretty typical of an Account Manager in any organization – we do everything and anything necessary to serve our clients the best work product. I manage not only some stellar direct clients, but also some fantastic white label relationships.

    There’s a few responsibilities / projects that stand out when I think about what I do exactly. Shortly after I started with Search Influence, I dived into Google Place Page creation, claiming and optimization for all of our existing clients, which led to hands-on creation of far over 100 Google Place Pages during my time here. Secondly, over the past 6 months, I’ve worked with Will and crew to totally revamp our SEO packages and some additional a la carte offerings, which was a great learning experience and a lot of fun.

    The average workday requires a wide range of skills, from time management, organizational, personal, and the ever important: “where are we eating lunch today?” skills.

    Is there anything you’d like to be doing more or less of around the SI offices? In the perfect world, what would you be doing all day?

    In a perfect world, I’d be cooking (and eating) all day. I was secretly hoping for a stove in our kitchen at the new office, but its probably a good thing that we don’t have one, or else I would be bringing batches of ingredients to whip up deliciousness in the kitchen at lunch time.

    As some of our readers know, you used to be the blog manager, cajoling, bribing and occasionally extorting entries out of everyone at the company. Be honest: do you miss it a little?

    Every day! Blogger-in-chief was one of my favorite hats I’ve worn around here. I’ve always loved to write (even research papers), and friends often asked me to review their papers as I was honest and would often edit it as much as I would if I was putting my name on it. WIth SI’s blog, not only did I love editing the posts, I was privileged to be the first to read SI’s take on breaking SEO news!

    Is there anything that excites you about coming to work every day?

    Is this a Yelp review or an interview? I love working with our clients. The best thing about what we do is that we get to help increase and improve the bottom line for small and large businesses. I love the whole process of selecting keywords, putting the strategy to work, and then watching the rankings climb, traffic go up, and customers come to the business.

    Does keeping track of so much information from the people in production and directly interfacing with clients every day get to be a lot of pressure? Any tips for handling it?

    Pressure? Nah. It’s a joy. That’s what the coffee is for. And To Do Lists. My #1 tip for handling any situation: Just write it down. Even if you think “oh, I’ll remember that” – write it down (and remember where you wrote it).

    Thanks so much for everything you do around here, Paula K! For the new readers, you can check out the wide variety of informative and insightful blog posts Paula has written for us, and stay tuned for more Influencer profiles in weeks to come!

  • 5 for Friday — Links, Stories & Posts For Your Weekend

    INFOGRAPHIC: Facebook Shopping Will Be B in 2015 — All Facebook

    In light of our recent focus on Facebook integration, this is an interesting infographic — social commerce is a booming field, and it’s predicted that Facebook shopping alone will generate over $30 billion in 2015. Take a look to find the numbers on customer behavior, graphs of predicted growth and a timeline of the movement.

    Social gems: More new tools for social marketing — B to B

    Interested in expanding your social marketing horizons beyond the dynamic duo of Facebook and Twitter? B to B has a handy list of tools and applications to fill any marketing campaign niche you can imagine.

    25 Great Facebook Page Content Ideas — OneForty.com

    While there are alternatives available (see above), Facebook is still the dominant way to interface with your online customers and create a community around your brand. However, simply maintaining a page isn’t enough — here are some tips to create a dynamic, active profile that’s bursting with fresh content to engage your audience.

    Google+ as a Business Tool — Pronet Advertising

    It’s no surprise that businesses are already horning in on Google+ profiles in order to market to a whole new audience. It appears to be working so far, but Google has indicated that this still-in-beta feature is intended expressly for personal users, with a business-optimized Google experience currently in development.

    So What Is It Developers? Android or iPhone? — Marketing Pilgrim

    Good news for Apple: despite the growing number of customers converting away from the iPhone to the Droid, developer support for Android appears to be waning. A smaller share of developers started Android projects in the second quarter of the year than the first, despite earlier reports that the painstaking Apple app approval process was causing programmers to shy away from iOS. Could this be a temporary flurry spurred by the announcement of the Verizon iPhone and the popularity of the iPad 2, or is Apple’s domination of the market here to stay?

  • Donde Esta Mexico, Google?

    The realm of Local SEO can be a complex, frustrating land. A fruitful, popular land but a land where seemingly easy obstacles can quickly turn into uphill battles. And, if your client happens to be in a country other than the U.S, that hilly jog transforms into a trek up Everest… without a Sherpa.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    For example, we are currently working with a Playa del Carmen hotelsclient that is interested in ramping-up their local presence. This isn’t the easiest task but it certainly isn’t impossible. A few Mexico-focused business directories will need to be sourced, Google translator will be used like it is going out of style and a Mexican-formatted Google Places listing will need to be created. Again, not simple but all in a day’s work around here.

    The most important thing to keep in mind when it comes to local SEO is that it is a newer industry and is constantly changing. This means that there can be quite a few kinks in the technology. Google is no exception to this.

    After creating the client’s Google Places listing, we had the misfortune of discovering that the wrong country code was added to the listing. Typically, this would be a setback that would require another round of verification for the listing but not a deal breaker. Unfortunately, this was not a typical case. The country code had not been added incorrectly by us, but by Google and our client wasn’t the only one that was affected by this.

    After some research, we discovered that listings in Playa Del Carmen, Mexico are using the USA country code (01) rather than Mexico’s country code (52) in the main search engine results page. However, the correct country code is used on the actual Place page. This is a pretty significant bug in Google Places but is par for the course in local SEO. Surely, the issue will eventually be resolved but for the time being it seems like there are going to be quite a few Mexican businesses with silent phone lines.

  • Lunch & Learn – Anthony Coleman on Facebook Tabs and Iframes

    Around here at the SI office we take our lunches seriously, and at the intersection of tasty food and a bunch of fun, hardworking SEO professionals comes our new “Lunch and Learn” series. This recently-debuted program is a biweekly tradition here at the office, where an Influencer will take the time to put together a humorous and educational presentation to embiggen the knowledge of even the most seasoned SEO veteran. Today, our very own Anthony Coleman kicked off the series with a superhero-tastic exploration of Facebook reveal tabs and newsletter sign-ups, as well as how iframes can be a boon to development, tracking and user interaction.

    Since Facebook’s native markup of a combination of HTML and XML can be clunky and very limited (especially when it comes to more sophisticated elements like Javascript), iframes offer a sleeker approach to Facebook brand display. They pull content directly from a business’s site, so that traditional HTML and the aforementioned advanced elements can be utilized to create a much more multi-faceted approach to drawing in eyeballs both before and after the “like.” Additionally, multiple tabs can be created within the frame, allowing for a customized complexity not normally seen in the basic FB layout. These tabs can offer different aspects of the business such as a “thank-you for liking” display, locations, specials, and forms.

    As most Facebook users simply “like and forget,” this kind of direct data can draw traffic to the business’s page instead of its Facebook. Since the third-party content exists on a familiar platform, though, it can function as a preliminary landing page, easing the users in to getting to know the brand or service. The more dynamic aspect of the frame tabs also makes it easier to track page views and user behavior. In turn, targeting demographics by aspects such as location, sex, age and interests is made simpler as well — something that anyone with an interest in Facebook marketing is surely invested in.

    On a more surface-level aspect, this approach is simply more engaging to the user than passive newsfeed updates. There are over 750 million users on Facebook (150 million + in the US alone), and maintaining a strong presence is a must for any social media-savvy brand. The updates can be informational (such as special offers and exclusives shown directly from the website onto the viewer’s feed), but also allows for direct interaction in the form of contests, mailing list sign-ups and other conversion points from viewer to participator.

    It was an educational afternoon at Search Influence, and we thank Anthony for his hard work putting together his presentation! He’s got an upcoming blog post on more Facebook tactics, and you can bet that future Lunch & Learns will be written up right here. In the meantime, you can check out his heroic (and informative!) presentation here.

  • Google Antitrust Case – Google+ Defiant in the Shadow of Harvey Birdman

    Google Antitrust Case
    "I'll take the case!"
    Over the past few years, Google has been investigated by the FTC over most aspects of their business, largely circling around their aggressive acquisition of properties to vertically integrate other services into their core search. As Google has added features such as Products, Maps, and Video searches and integrated them into the main search results, competitors have seen their traffic decrease as users stay on Google-owned sites.

    Making good on a somewhat threatening letter from the Senate Subcommittee on Antitrust, Competition Policy, and Consumer Rights two weeks earlier, on June 23, the FTC continued their impression of Harvey Birdman. Issuing a subpoena “relating to a review… of Google’s business practices, including search and advertising,” the FTC has opened an investigation to “address fundamental questions of business operations.” These questions, though immediately unclear to Google (if their admission and response on their blog isn’t just rhetoric), have been speculated on rather endlessly by pundits.

    Starting from their blog, Google lists a few ways that they believe they put the user, i.e. their consumer in economic terms, first in their decisions. Search neutrality, vertical integration of search, the relationships involving paid search, clarity of function and policy, and consumer choice and freedom of movement, are all core facets upon which Google prides itself. Similarly, SEO dominatrix Matt Cutts discussed with Bloomberg news about the case, but managed to deflect most of the more interesting questions.

    On first glance, this investigation seems to parallel the Microsoft case that crippled the company’s ability to innovate on its OS, but not its market share or company size. The Findings of Fact from that case, which were not overturned in the successful appeal, offer insight into the kinds of inquiry Google will endure. However, it’s quickly becoming clear that substantive differences may doom the FTC’s case.

    Much of the argument for monopoly power in the Microsoft case stems from an inability for consumers to effectively and seamlessly switch from platform to platform. If you have a PC, you’ll either have to run Windows or put in serious effort to run your computer like Windows. But in Google’s case, they are more like the open-source alternatives in that there is a high level of customizability and a large number of competitors that are easy to switch to. Google and Microsoft both benefit from the positive feedback loop (or arguably vicious cycle, if you’re a competitor) caused by being the dominant firm in the industry. Consumers and business partners (read: surfers and webmasters) use and develop for Google first and primarily, as it is the best-known way of finding things on the Internet.

    Google’s close-to-first-mover advantage is, of course a major effect on competitiveness of the industry, outstripping Yahoo and, so far, with more panache than Bing. Furthermore, Google’s dominance isn’t just in search. Their maps and directions have all but relegated Mapquest to vintage sites; YouTube is clearly the most-used video site on the web; the image search, though lacking some of the features of TinEye, certainly is used more; Google Docs is infinitely more well-known than any of its competitors, including offerings from Microsoft Office and Adobe; and their forays into social platforms, though rather unsuccessful, may have finally found its niche, cutting into Facebook shares per article across the top 100 tech sites. Google might even suffer the same fear of pre-installation, as three of four major browsers, one of which is owned by the company, search on Google by default.

    Sure, Google has the majority of search share, between 60% and 70%. But do the influences of Facebook’s social search, Twitter’s massive linksharing search, the vertical search engines, and the distinctive qualities that truly separate Google’s broad search competitors from the Big Panda really have no effect on the breadth of choices the consumer has to find content on the web? Even more so, many of the features of Docs are better implemented outside of a browser. And ever-lurking behind that success is the fact that technology, and especially non-physical products and services, have a habit of being fleeting or changing focus rapidly — case in point: Mahalo. Google isn’t invulnerable — their social networks so far have been rife with deep enough privacy issues to be all but shuttered by a class-action settlement.

    Even further complicating the antitrust case is the increasingly incestuous relationship between Google and the US government. “Only” $40 million (.13%) of Google’s revenue comes from government contracts, but it’s extraordinarily clear that even having government contracts gives a major foothold in emerging markets, amplifying the first-mover advantage already in place. These contracts range from simple things like email (using Google’s Apps for Government) and Analytics to more bizarre agreements involving Google Earth for the Pentagon, FBI, and DEA and aircraft parking deals with NASA. Even more sticky is the enormous amount of lobbying Google has done over the past 5 years, increasing their budget from $800,000 in 2006 to over $5.1 million in 2010. Eric Schmidt, former Google CEO, is a close friend of President Obama, and the company came in 5th for campaign donations to his campaign.

    But the obvious monopoly power wasn’t even the focus of the Microsoft trial — it was, in fact, a bait-and-switch on the general public to garner support for much more complex antitrust issues. The trial was to “address fundamental questions of business operations” concerning how it licensed the APIs differently to different companies to limit competition. While on the one hand Google has relentlessly supported open source coding, helping create a transparent and easy-to-enter market, they are also constantly involved in boxing out competitors, though this doesn’t minimize that coalitions have gathered to do the same to Big Panda too.

    A slough of allegations regarding Google’s advertisement business have cropped up in the wake of the announcement of the investigation. Two arguments are at the center of the debate: that Google unfairly affects the Adwords bidding process in favor of Google-owned entities, and that Google unfairly affects the organic rankings in favor of high-revenue Adsense partners. Both of these arguments fly in the face of official Google policy.

    Those claims must be on the radar of FTC officials, but judges and prosecutors will almost certainly either be too unfamiliar with the system to be able to parse out the technical details in place, or be baffled by the ubiquity of Google ads across the internet and lose the forest for the trees — such relatively outlandish accusations drive attention away from more prescient issues in the advertising system, such as uneven application of standards for content. These arguments break down even further on investigation, since social sharing likely drives more traffic to larger content farms, such as perennial slacker favorite and Demand Media flagship Cracked, which enjoys a vibrant social share rate. It would be extremely surprising if either of these accusations turn out to be true; however, if they are, Google will have to answer for significantly more than anyone expected.

    The other side of the allegation coin is significantly less conspiracy-theory. The massive vertical integration Google has committed since moving away from simply being a text search engine, starting with Images and moving towards Maps and GIS systems, Books, shopping, and travel links. Such rapid expansion into every money-making part of the web leads some to ask “How many industries is Google allowed to index under search and deprive the creators of an ability to monetize it?”

    That would be a valid question if two factors weren’t in play. First, modern economic theory finds vertical integration to be more economically efficient and better for consumers — the real victims of noncompetitive markets for antitrust theory, as opposed to the monopoly’s competitors. But this isn’t enough — if the only portal to websites were search engines, it would be a travesty to allow search engines to keep eating up website business models and including them as “search.” But why would a company solely rely on a third party to provide traffic? Certainly the reason why one would go to Kayak or Expedia is because of more traditional marketing they’ve done to draw attention to their site. Where the internet is concerned, many e-businesses seem to forget that their branding isn’t their top-ranking keyword — it’s actually having a business that people will want to use and recommend to their friends.

    Recommendations are not only through social media sites, either. +1 and Facebook and Twitter and whatever else is around the bend isn’t the only kind of endorsement e-business can enjoy — whatever happened to meatspace? Yelp, Foundem, and Kayak have all registered complaints against Google, saying that the vertical search integration has damaged their businesses irreparably. The short answer is “get over it;” the longer one involves some stern words to the companies’ marketing departments.

    But Google+ is different, and may be taken as a gigantic pyrotechnic middle finger to the FTC. Facebook and Google do compete, but the lines have always been in different business models, even as Facebook includes more and more Internet searching into their platform. Google+ is the first real competitor to Facebook, as Orkut was pre-existing and woefully underpopulated in the US and Buzz was more of a Twitter competitor. This kind of vertical integration and attempt to eat up more of people’s time on the web is exactly the wrong kind of publicity Google needs, even as it avoids the problems of stagnation that Microsoft had when it was under investigation. It’s hard to believe the competition-themed sales pitch Google cooked up after receiving the FTC notification, when even the Economist sees Google+ as a direct competitor to FB in order to return Google to its position as the “main conduit via which people access the web.”

    Regardless of the intent or timing of Google+, the expansion and Internet buzz around the new service shows the power of the already-abandoned mantra “Don’t be evil.” The Economist likened the “addictiveness” of Google to chocolate instead of cigarettes; Internet analyst Greg Sterling mentions Google’s “capacity to evoke a certain kind of enthusiasm when it tries to do something that is difficult;” and everyone’s Facebook feed seems to have one friend who’s closing up shop and scooting over to feed El-Goog because they somehow trust Singhal, Schmidt, and Cutts over Zuckerberg.

    And that consumer trust, despite the wails of webmasters of various types and complaints of those who work closely with Google, might be the deciding factor in this case. In general, we choose to search, share, and produce with Google, despite the fact that we might be more than gently directed recursively back to other Google properties. While this FTC investigation could spell the end of Google dominance, the tipping point is a filing of a complaint, not the start of the review, and even former FTC official David Balto assumes that there is likely no explicit wrongdoing. This FTC case, however, may give Bing its golden ticket to significantly differentiate itself from Google and become a more significant competitor.

    The AP reported a 1.4% drop in stock value immediately following the FTC announcement, but the stock has since recovered.

    For edification, here are the Bing and Google organic results pages for a variety of broad Google Services.

  • 5 for Friday — Links, Stories & Posts For Your Weekend

    FiveThe Future of Mobile Payments — Mashable

    Online monetary transfer giant PayPal has boldly announced that wallets will be obsolete by 2015, aiming to replace traditional credit cards with mobile phone payments. With Paypal gearing up for focus on mobile payments, as well as Google’s recently launched Google Wallet service and Visa’s new interest in the mobile payment platform Square, the claim might not be so grandiose as it seems. This handy infographic presents some data on where mobile payments might go from here.

    Can’t Get Enough Of Facebook’s News Feed? — All Facebook

    Facebook has been revving its engine at full throttle lately, implementing a new chat setup, a Facebook Video collaboration with Skype and now a new data-intensive news feed that can be scrolled through without shuffling any ads, application bookmarks and the navigation bar off-screen. While the aforementioned new features have been generating a lot of buzz, this marks the first redesign of the home page in over a year. Is it just time for some late spring cleaning, or are they feeling the pressure in competition with Google+?

    Study: Local businesses ‘like’ social media for marketing — B to B Online

    According to a recent Roost poll, small business owners show strong approval for social media marketing, with nearly three-quarters indicating that it is more effective than paid search. While many cited positives such as ease of use, cost-effectiveness and ability to keep them on their toes, they also reported downsides such as not being able to get concrete indications of the success of their endeavors.

    Facebook Blocks Friend Export to Google Plus — SEOChat

    A third-party application designed to allow a Facebook user to export their friends’ data such as name, email address, birthday and so on has been blocked from Facebook. While this application does have legitimate conflicts with Facebook’s TOS (specifically the privacy and information-gathering clauses) (I’ll leave this comment up to your imagination), the fact that FB officials chose to go after it only after the announcement of Google+ speaks volumes.

    What is the Best Time of Day to Tweet — Graywolf SEO

    So you’ve established your online identity, accumulated the appropriate number of followers and are ready to start writing attention-grabbing, informative tweets. When to post so they get the maximum number of eyeballs possible? Tweriod.com will analyze your last 5,000 followers and ascertain when they were online. While this isn’t a one-way ticket to permanent broadcast mode, this tool (especially when combined with other reporting utilities such as those that come with Hootsuite and Bufferapp) can be significantly handy for scheduling.