10
Oct
08

Ranking is becoming a big problem for Google

Alexa, webtrends, google analytics. The measurement and the degree of trust of websites, is becoming a problem for all the web for years. Google’s CEO is also have some problems about it.

Google’s Schmidt Says Internet ‘Cesspool’ Needs Brands

Says the Solution Is Quality Content; Tells Publishers and Editors to ‘Increase Your Relevance’
The internet is fast becoming a “cesspool” where false information thrives, Google CEO Eric Schmidt said yesterday. Speaking with an audience of magazine executives visiting the Google campus here as part of their annual industry conference, he said their brands were increasingly important signals that content can be trusted.

“Brands are the solution, not the problem,” Mr. Schmidt said. “Brands are how you sort out the cesspool.”
Google CEO Eric Schmidt: ‘We don’t do content. You all create content.’
Welcome words
Those were welcome words for the editors and publishers who have been watching the internet draw more and more ad spending every year. Mr. Schmidt took aim, however, at the Association of National Advertisers for opposing Google’s planned ad deal with Yahoo. The association has said the deal will diminish competition and help Google and Yahoo increase ad prices.

“If you’re going to criticize us, criticize us correctly,” Mr. Schmidt said. “We’re guilty of many things, but that’s not one of them.”

In a talk that he structured mostly as an invitation for questions and ideas, Mr. Schmidt declined to advise magazines on looking more popular to Google’s page-ranking programs.

“We don’t actually want you to be successful,” he said. The company’s algorithms are trying to find the most relevant search results, after all, not the sites that best game the system. “The fundamental way to increase your rank is to increase your relevance,” he added.

On the subject of print, especially newspapers as we have known them, Mr. Schmidt was decidedly gloomy. “The evidence is not good,” he said, guessing that the print business will eventually comprise a smaller piece of publishers’ much larger online businesses.

A ‘natural partnership’
That said, magazines and other professional content creators are essential for Google’s efforts to help people find desirable content, he explained. “We don’t do content,” he said. “You all create content. It’s a natural partnership.”

But when asked where the industry ends up if there aren’t outlets willing to pay journalists to create quality content, Mr. Schmidt was a bit Palin-esque, saying that he didn’t have an answer but one thing to look at is whether journalism should be a for-profit enterprise.

The future of quality editorial is, moreover, hardly certain. “It’s a huge question in the world,” Mr. Schmidt said, “particularly in the United States.”

Branding, on the other hand, may be an essential element that helps people navigate the world, he said. “Brand affinity is clearly hard wired,” he said. “It is so fundamental to human existence that it’s not going away. It must have a genetic component.”

His talk came as part of a broader program organized for the magazine executives by Google. Eileen Naughton, Google’s director of media platforms, spoke first — greeting many people she knew from her years as a magazine executive. She joined Google after Time Inc. eliminated 105 jobs, including hers, to cut costs in December 2005. Attendees also listened to tutorials from Twitter’s chairman-chief product officer, Evan James; YouTube’s head of client solutions and ad programs, Jamie Byrne; and RockYou’s CEO and founder, Lance Tokuda.


1 Response to “Ranking is becoming a big problem for Google”


  1. 1 martinlock
    October 30, 2008 at 11:36 am

    Firstly, in Snapshot one can compare only three sites. Secondly, sites with less that 10000 uniques are excluded and thirdly, this is available only for the US audience. These three limitations still keep Google the favorite followed by Alexa.



View my FriendFeed
Add to Technorati Favorites

Blog Stats

  • 3,853 hits

RSS Turkish Press Review

  • Press Roundup July 14, 2009
    Greenpeace protestors protested yesterday against an oil tanker traveling through El Estrecho Natural Park. They held a banner reading “España cómplice de la contaminación” (Spain, an accomplice in pollution) after painting a similar message on the ship's hull.
  • Grab your wine and come join in the protest July 14, 2009
    There are some moments when you almost feel the need for a conspiracy theory to explain certain events. One such event is a recent protest that took place over a “wine-laden concert at Topkapı Palace.”
  • There is no military tutelage in Turkey July 14, 2009
    As the signing ceremony for the Nabucco project took place yesterday in Ankara, Republican People's Party (CHP) leader Deniz Baykal was busy saying Turkey's real problem is not its “military tutelage,” but instead its “[Prime Minister Recep] Tayyip Erdoğan tutelage.”
  • Nabucco and politics July 14, 2009
    How is it that Turkey can agree to nations that oppose its entrance into the European Union having a word when it comes to Turkish energy policies?
  • Let's not get too excited July 14, 2009
    Let's not get too excited. Turkey is strengthening its role as a bridge between the East and the West in the arena of energy. Now, in the wake of the Kirkuk-Ceyhan and Baku-Ceyhan pipelines, it has signed off on the Nabucco gas pipeline.
  • Press Roundup July 13, 2009
    Around 10,000 people gathered in İstanbul's Cağlayan Square on Sunday to denounce the Chinese mistreatment of the Muslim Uighur minority in the Xinjiang region, following deadly violence in the region's capital, Urumqi.
  • Barbie doll secularism July 13, 2009
    A religious leader who banned Barbie dolls has made me rethink the whole question of secularism.
  • The center of political clashes July 13, 2009
    Rather than being a center of political compromise, Parliament has become a center of political clashes. Since 2007, this has been a particularly palpable reality.
  • YÖK, ÖSS and the choice system July 13, 2009
    The results of the Student Selection Exam (ÖSS) were announced yesterday. The ÖSS choice system is based on the idea that by narrowing the field through an exam placed in front of a student, you will have the student decide which field he or she will go into.
  • A new sort of plan by that ineffectual crowd? July 13, 2009
    I wonder if the ineffectual leaders of the Feb. 28, 1997 process are now returning to us dressed in costumes that make them look like some sort of religious fighters.

Pages

 

October 2008
M T W T F S S
« Sep   Nov »
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031