Top SES News

SES 2006: Schmidt on Privacy, Proprietary Algorithms
The sensitivity of search string data is suddenly on everyone's mind due to news of the AOL data leak on a research site this week. Search Engine Watch editor Danny Sullivan is set to interview Google CEO Eric Schmidt in the premier event of San Jose Search Engine Strategies show in San Jose.

SES 2006: Two Peas in a Pod: Usability and SEO
Moderated by Rebecca Lieb of ClickZ with presentations by Matt Bailey of SiteLogic and Shari Thurow of Grantastic Designs. First up is Shari who answered questions about usability and search.

SES 2006: Pimp That Site!
Most sites could benefit from a little nip and tuck, and when that can increase their search engine visibility from nil to above-the-fold in the SERPs, the impact on a site can be dramatic.

SES 2006: SE Algos: Can You Please Them All?
Search engine specialists use to spend inordinate amounts of time creating pages that ranked well at just one search engine due to algorithmic weighting of known and very specific ranking factors.

SES 2006: Optimizing Your Feed
This is a continuation of an earlier offering about blog and RSS feed optimization. Because the information is dense, we thought it best to present it with another spray of bullets. Managing editor Mike McDonald is one heck of a note-taker.

SES 2006: Google, Yahoo & MSN Research Labs
The Research Laboratories session at SES San Jose 2006 brought representatives from the top 3 engines to talk about how projects emerge from their labs to become actual search tools.

SES 2006: Search Engines, Friend Or Foe
The best thing about search engines is how they make it easy to find relevant content out of millions of web sites; that may be the worst thing about them too.


08.10.06


Who Are You? Yahoo! Mail And Search Engine Results

By StraightUpSearch

"Personalization" on the web is becoming very popular. Sites like MySpace and Yahoo! seem to go to great lengths to allow users to create their own "identities" online - both intellectually and physically.

Even MSN allows the user to change the background color of the homepage, thus creating their very own "personalized" search medium.

Because it is ever-so-interesting to see how I am allowed to represent myself online and how I perceive myself (given the limitations of my choices) I decided to see how I look in Yahoo!'s eyes. With Yahoo! Mail a user can create a physical icon of oneself which is displayed when they open their email. Until you choose the physical aspects of yourself you simply get a gray window with an outline of a person with hair that looks like Albert Einstein's.

When I entered Victor Frankenstein's laboratory, aka, Yahoo!'s face, hair, skin color, eye color, etc. choice bank, I honestly felt a little limited. But then again, how could I expect them to provide me with choices like, dishwater blonde hair or blue-ish gray eyes? Even with my limitations, I began my creation - let's see, blonde hair, blue eyes, fair skin, well, I like this outfit, it really represents my personal style, and this background really shows who I am.

Voila! It's me!

Because of my investigation, when I check my Yahoo! email at home, I can see "Teal" staring back at me, even blinking occasionally. She has blue eyes and short blonde hair - she looks just like me.

Wanna wallet stuffed with $10,000?

This whole idea of online representation got me to thinking about the choices we are given online and what they and their limitations represent. Overcoming the limitations of the internet - search results, specifically - is what my job is all about. Working in search engine optimization, we are always looking at ways for our clients to avoid being constrained by the limitations of the search engines.

Idealistically, the central goal of a search engine is to provide the user with a thorough set of choices based on the user's query - but this isn't always the case. In SEO, we try to locate these tendencies and work with them so that our clients will be successful on the internet. In combination with other SEO strategies, we are working to help the search engines recognize relevant websites to return in search results.

So until the perfection of search engines is complete, we are going to have to make due with our somewhat limited choices. However, unlike the limited options available to build the blonde hair, blue eyed cartoon character adorning my Yahoo! Mail, users have more than a few choices and can always refine their query to enhance the choices they are presented with.

About the Author:
Oneupweb is the only two-time winner of the ClickZ award for "Best Search Engine Engine Marketing Firm". StraightUpSearch's blog authors include experts from Oneupweb's natural SEO, pay-per-click campaign management, research, marketing, design, and sales departments.

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