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Showing posts with label SEO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SEO. Show all posts
Monday, October 13, 2014

Google Panda 4.1: What's new?

Another Google update enviability means Winners and Losers, this new update has been dubbed Panda 4.1 (although many of Google's other algorithms were updated) and news broke via Google employee Pierre Far's Google+ page. Medium and small websites are said to have benefitted most from 4.1, in the past Google has been accused of favouring the bigger players, but they expect to see the highest ranking sites to come in a variety of sizes now.

The Panda algorithm penalises content that it believes offers little or no value to users.  What is new about the latest Panda update is that Google has developed new and more sophisticated signals to more accurately detect low-quality and thin content from ranking highly,
although it's worth noting that 4.1 has only effected 3-5% of search queries. 

Losers

Gaming, lyric and some medical portals suffered organic search visibility losses, this seems to be because these sites tend to have thin, repeated, or aggregated content, and Google deems this type of content as low quality. Lyric websites often have identical content to their competitors, medical content sites have a habit of repeating content, while gaming sites have a lack of content compared to other platforms. Affiliate sites have also been deemed losers by many tech experts due to their thin content.

Winners

News websites, download portals and content sites benefitted due to the fact they are regularly updated with new, (presumably) high-quality and unique information. Another thing to note is that sites that were hit by the Panda 4.0 update have been working hard to delete duplicate and thin content over the past few months and as a result have recovered very well, examples include rd.com, Hotelguides.com and Yourtango.com.

Concerned about how this update may affect your website? Although it may seem that Google is trying to catch websites out, they're actually very clear with how they critique content. They suggest referring to the following questions when curating your own content;

  1. Would you trust the information presented in this article?
  2. Is this article written by an expert or enthusiast who knows the topic well?
  3. Does this article have spelling, stylistic, or factual errors?
  4. Does the page provide substantial value when compared to other pages in search results?
  5. Was the article edited well, or does it appear sloppy or hastily produced?
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Monday, July 07, 2014

Larry Page and Sergey Brin lay out the future of Google
You might want to get comfortable for this one...


Serial investor Vinod Khosla sits down with Google-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin for a revealing and fascinating conversation.

As specialists in PPC and SEO recruitment, we're existing in an industry that has been massively shaped by the development of Google. 




"Search seemed pretty important to us"
Google's founders discuss how they almost sold to Excite in 1999, but ended up rejecting the offers of the search companies of the day - due to their apparent lack of interest in search. As an aside the pair later joke how they now own the building Excite toured them around.

It's interesting how a simple algorithm that didn't get sold to Lycos has grown into a company that can legitimately answer questions about how it will avoid changing the human make-up of global workforces. Revealingly Brin states '90% of people used to farmers', perhaps implying that menial jobs could be given over to an automated workforce, while people taken on service roles. Page suggests shortening working hours to solve unemployment issues.

Khosla contributes "Fundamentally I believe we're moving from an economy of labour and capital, to an economy of ideas". 

With the internet giant planning out the roadmap for the future of the company, and seemingly governmental and societal change could follow, it marks an interesting point with which to consider the trends across innovation and digital.

Moving towards ubiquitous, contextual and increasingly personalised interaction how will PPC or SEO, Design, Content writing and User Experience be re-shaped by these changes?

If you work in digital, what's on the horizon for you - and just how much change have you been through in reaching this point?

We intend to try to answer these questions in greater detail over the coming weeks (we've already started by discussing 'anti-social media') so if you've got an opinion to add, make your voice heard!

Get in touch - twitter @chrysalisrec and @_matthewdavies
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Wednesday, May 07, 2014

The Robots: Taking your job, taking your girlfriend.
Despite looking like a young Robocop, this guy just plays ping pong. "You have 40 seconds to serve".

It’s been revealed in a report that 1 in 3 Britons fears that a robot will be taking their job in the near future. Jobs that are dull, dangerous or dirty look set for robot overhaul, with our metallic friends more than able to pick up simple routines in defined structures. However anything more complicated than picking up one thing in one place, following one route and putting it down in another unchanging place is likely to flummox a robot. Even ironing is beyond them. 

Other headline stats - 39% of Britons fear that robots pose a definite threat to humanity, while 17% of people are willing to have sex with a robot. We hope they’re not the same, very confused, people. Another recent report suggests 702 currently human jobs are in danger of becoming robot territory.

It’s an interesting question to ponder for our specific digital sector as the work in PPC and SEO exists entirely in the digital space, which oddly means the nuances and human strategy takes it far away from something easily-automated like factory work. In terms of SEO though are we already working for an inorganic algorithm? Does programmatic buying add up to robots doing PPC?

Robots are already making a better job of saving lives (in hospitals) and taking lives (on the battlefield) so it’s not surprising to hear that they might be taking up the reins of many things in between.

If about 50 years of Hollywood hasn’t convinced you robots might not be fantastic, even Stephen Hawking is chipping in now. The true tipping point may come when it’s cheaper to build a robot than employ a person on minimum wage, as whether it’s robots or humans in charge capitalism is likely to win out.

This robot is fantastic at making Japanese pancakes.

Martin Smith, Professor of Robotics at University of Middlesex offered a calming voice though, saying “While many of us worry about the role of technology and machines in modern society, robots are increasingly being developed for important roles that will help protect and improve our lives.

"Though many fear their jobs will be taken over by machines, it is more likely that robots will be used as assistants, and the future workforce could have the benefit of avoiding hazardous and repetitive tasks rather than suffer mass redundancies.”

Could this robot do your job?

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Monday, January 27, 2014

2014 has started with a bang, and a number of competitive pitches have led to some huge agency wins!
We've highlighted the major deals this January:

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Thursday, December 12, 2013

We caught up with Harriet Sanders, one of our account managers, in order to find out a little more about the role of being a recruiter.

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Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Advertising Q+A: Brand Republic and Twitter's Bruce Daisley
Our friends at Brand Republic broke new ground this afternoon with an fully interactive in-depth interview with Twitter's UK Director Bruce Daisley. This question-and-answer session was live on Twitter from 12.30 BST under the hastag #brchat.


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