05/23 /// 8 Apps Every Writer Should Have
May 2012
April 2012
March 2012
February 2012
January 2012
December 2011
November 2011
October 2011
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
November 2010
October 2010
September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
Out of my Gord - By Gord Hotchkiss
GrokDotCom - By Brian Eisenberg
Link Building Best Practices Blog
SEM Hints: Search Engine Marketing Hints, Tips & Tools For Online Businesses
Search Engine Land - by Danny Sullivan
Virtual Marketing Blog: Internet Marketing News, Reviews and Insights
SEMPO Global Search Marketing Blog
SEMPO Canada Search Marketing Blog
![]()
![]()
/// Posted by Travis Smith on Sunday, August 31, 2008
Pros and Cons of Google Suggest
From: feedburner.com
A couple of days ago, we had reported about the inception of Google Suggest, a search suggestive feature that has been designed by Google to simplify the user search experience, by providing highly accurate search suggestions. As per Google, we’re excited because Google Suggest will be “graduating” from Labs and available by default on the Google.com homepage. Over the next week, we’ll be rolling this out so that more and more of you will start seeing a list of query suggestions when you start typing into the search box.
One of the biggest effects that Google Suggest might have on the search experience would be that the searches will most probably lose the long tail keywords. The chances are that, users would not manually input long search queries, instead would rather rely on Google Suggest and prefer the short tail queries suggested by Google.

As Martin Bowling explains, Google will now be forcing users into high-volume, high-money terms (i.e., terms that people are bidding on via Adsense) it’s almost like Google is creating a new Top 10 before the user is ever even taken to the SERPs. By having your primary keywords that you are ranking for listed in this drop down, you are far more likely to get traffic than those related terms that aren’t being listed. When presented with options, people will generally choose one.
However, as we also conduct and maintain PPC campaigns at PageTraffic, we have observed that the Google Suggest feature is especially impactful for our efforts and like all other PPC firms, we would also like to be on top of our game and be aware of the phrases that are suggested frequently as well as relevantly and bid accordingly.
Over at Site Creations, Scott Clark, has put up a very interesting post that highlights the 9 potential ways, through which Google Suggest might change the pattern of search marketing. These potential steps are:
- Google Suggest Drop Down a new micro SERP: Those who make their way into the suggest feature get a better than #1 position. For example, typing ipod case into Google with Suggest shows the first suggested feature as ipod cases at Wal-Mart - grabbing people and then offering up the organic page free from PPC ads that use Wal-Mart in their keywords.
- Google Suggest Results May Change Long-Tail Search Optimization: Those of us who believe in doing long-tail marketing may find an decrease down the tail from search, and a greater need to develop segments of our site to serve those long tail queries. Searches that used to come in with two word phrases may now have 3-4 words, which helps with medium-tail optimization, but longer phrases previously further down the tail may be clipped. This will concentrate search terms so that Adwords bids will rise and competition increases in a sort of ‘cluster’ effect.
- We May See More Traffic to Regional Sites: People regularly enter ‘cheap gas’ and ‘best dentist’ in search engines - without qualifying the searches at all. Organic results tend to send people to national portals, but suggest-driven search gets them closer to well optimized, regional sites. A search for ‘cheap gas’ without search suggest offers gasbuddy.com at number one organic result, while a ‘suggested’ search for ‘cheap gas houston’ gives houstongasprices.com.
- Google Suggest SERPS offer More Impact for Trademark Blocking in PPC: If your tradename is offered in
Google suggest results, and youve filed a trademark complaint form, the results page will be free from paid competition giving you a better shot at the traffic through organic or ppc links.Comments
Tag: Google
Add to
Del.icio.us |
Digg |
Reddit |
Furl
Have a bookmark! -
- Google Suggest Can Improve User/Searcher Skills Forever: With Google suggest constantly popping up when you go about your daily queries, many who never really thought of keyphrases will now start to think about them. It will be a constant reinforcement of our efforts to think about how consumers search. We may have to adjust our planning to meet these enhanced skills.
- Google Suggest Can Be an Ad-Hoc Negative Keyword Tool: There are other ways to be more comprehensive, but Google suggest can help to identify negative keywords you may want to enter in your campaigns. And I saw some negative phrases with higher index numbers that never showed up in Google keyword tools.
- Dramatically Reduced Spelling Error Opportunity: While many of us set up ad-groups to capture spelling errors, this will have a decreasing impact as people start to use the suggest feature as a live auto-correction. Typo-campaigns may get less traffic.
- Hijacking Google Suggest May Become a SEO Technique: It may become possible to hijack Google suggest so that competitive phrases are strategically flashed to the user. For example.. if you sell abc widget then a suggest of abc widget fails miserably could be used to divert traffic.
- Better Searches Offer Improved Analytics Information: With the user making clear choices among those available, well have better information about what is enticing and engaging to the users. Vague, high volume two-word searches are always confusing when were looking to make decisions, and this might just help us plan better.
Read Original: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/searchnewzlatestnews/~3/378149171/sn-4-20080829ProsConsofGoogleSuggest.html







