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Search engine optimization
Interesting article in today's PaidContent.org blog (Rafat
Ali/Jimmy Guterman), which I am pasting in below. Note the
reference about journalists learning how to write to get higher
ranking in Google's search results. This "talk to the machine"
strategy is critical for anyone writing on the Web today.
Implications: (a) legacy content will fall behind in search
results, making retrospective digitization projects less and less
valuable over time (b) authors who don't know how to do this will
be at a disadvantage, pushing them to work with publishers who do
(Hint: hire a consultant), and (c) Google creates new problems
even as it solves others (but no librarian needs to be told
this).
The reference to the 415 and 408 area codes is amusing, but will
irk the 650s at Stanford and Sand Hill Road.
Joe Esposito
(831)
" . . .in the U.S. we have the tendency to believe that
innovation happens only here (and-face it-some of us think it
happens only in the 415 and 408 area codes), so it's a little
eye-opening when we look outside the U.S. and see ideas we
haven't thought of. As the Wall Street Journal reports, British
newspapers are going past the search-engine optimization most
U.S. newspapers rely on and battling to buy search terms of news
events on Google. (U.S. newspapers do some of this, but nowhere
near as aggressively.) The Daily Telegraph and the Times of
London, according to the WSJ, are "paying to put their stories in
front of readers by buying Google ads-a practice the papers say
has intensified in recent months-[which] is different from past
marketing efforts. Some readers may not realize that links to
articles that appear higher up on Google are paid for while
others appear lower down because they didn't pay, even though the
higher ones are marked "sponsored links.'"
The story also shows how search-engine optimization has moved
from marketing to editorial. The Times of London "is training
journalists to write in a way that makes their articles more
likely to appear among Google's unpaid search results." This
won't stop anytime soon, especially as the British papers battle
for more U.S. readers. As Edward Roussel, the Telegraph's digital
editor, says, "The most important driver of all readers [to our
site] is Google, except for people who know us and come directly.
It plays a critical part of exporting our brand, particularly to
the U.S." '
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