2010 New Year Logos from Search Engines: Yahoo, Bing, Ask.com & Google (Coming Soon)

Typically, I compile the New Years logos from the various search engines and search industry on New Years Day, but most of the search engines, with the exception of Google, have the logos out already. So here are the 2010 New Years logos. If any of them update and when Google adds there logo, I will update this post.

Google:

[Coming Soon]

Yahoo (Animated):

Yahoo (Static):

Yahoo New Years Logo

Bing:

Bing New Years Logo

Ask.com:

Ask.com New Years Logo

DogPile:

DogPile New Years Logo

Baidu:

Baidu New Years Logo

Clicker:

Clicker New Years Logo

Sogou:

Sogou New Years Logo

Cre8asite Forums:

Cre8asite Forums New Years Logo

Search Engine Roundtable (that’s us):

New Years 2010 at SERoundtable.com

For the past year’s logos, see: New Years 2009, New Years 2008, New Years 2007, Google’s 2006 logo, Search Engine Roundtable’s 2006 logo, Ask’s 2005 logo, and Cre8asite’s 2005.

Forum discussion currently at Search Engine Roundtable Forums, Bing Forums.


Typically, I compile the New Years logos from the various search engines and search industry on New Years Day, but most of the search engines, with the exception of Google, have the logos out already. So here are the 2010 New Years logos. If any of them update and when Google adds there logo, I will update this post.

Google:

[Coming Soon]

Yahoo (Animated):

Yahoo (Static):

Yahoo New Years Logo

Bing:

Bing New Years Logo

Ask.com:

Ask.com New Years Logo

DogPile:

DogPile New Years Logo

Baidu:

Baidu New Years Logo

Clicker:

Clicker New Years Logo

Sogou:

Sogou New Years Logo

Cre8asite Forums:

Cre8asite Forums New Years Logo

Search Engine Roundtable (that’s us):

New Years 2010 at SERoundtable.com

For the past year’s logos, see: New Years 2009, New Years 2008, New Years 2007, Google’s 2006 logo, Search Engine Roundtable’s 2006 logo, Cre8asite’s 2005.

Forum discussion currently at Search Engine Roundtable Forums, Bing Forums.



2010 New Year Logos from Search Engines: Yahoo, Bing, Ask.com & Google

Typically, I compile the New Years logos from the various search engines and search industry on New Years Day, but most of the search engines, with the exception of Google, have the logos out already. So here are the 2010 New Years logos. If any of them update and when Google adds there logo, I will update this post.

Google:

Google New Years 2010

Yahoo (Animated):

Yahoo (Static):

Yahoo New Years Logo

Bing:

Bing New Years Logo

AOL:

AOL New Years Theme

Ask.com:

Ask.com New Years Logo

DogPile:

DogPile New Years Logo

Baidu:

Baidu New Years Logo

Clicker:

Clicker New Years Logo

Sogou:

Sogou New Years Logo

Zuula:

Zuula New Years Logo

Cre8asite Forums:

Cre8asite Forums New Years Logo

Search Engine Roundtable (that’s us):

New Years 2010 at SERoundtable.com

For the past year’s logos, see: New Years 2009, New Years 2008, New Years 2007, Google’s 2006 logo, Search Engine Roundtable’s 2006 logo, Ask’s 2005 logo, and Cre8asite’s 2005.

Forum discussion currently at Search Engine Roundtable Forums, Bing Forums, HighRankings Forums, Google Webmaster Help, WebmasterWorld and Cre8asite Forums.


Update: Remember the I’m Feeling Lucky Google Countdown feature? Well, at midnight, when you click it, this is what it looks like: Via websonic.nl


Typically, I compile the New Years logos from the various search engines and search industry on New Years Day, but most of the search engines, with the exception of Google, have the logos out already. So here are the 2010 New Years logos. If any of them update and when Google adds there logo, I will update this post.

Google:

Google New Years 2010

Yahoo (Animated):

Yahoo (Static):

Yahoo New Years Logo

Bing:

Bing New Years Logo

AOL:

AOL New Years Theme

Ask.com:

Ask.com New Years Logo

DogPile:

DogPile New Years Logo

Baidu:

Baidu New Years Logo

Clicker:

Clicker New Years Logo

Sogou:

Sogou New Years Logo

Zuula:

Zuula New Years Logo

Cre8asite Forums:

Cre8asite Forums New Years Logo

Search Engine Roundtable (that’s us):

New Years 2010 at SERoundtable.com

For the past year’s logos, see: New Years 2009, New Years 2008, New Years 2007, Google’s 2006 logo, Search Engine Roundtable’s 2006 logo, Cre8asite’s 2005.

Forum discussion currently at Search Engine Roundtable Forums, Bing Forums, HighRankings Forums, Google Webmaster Help, WebmasterWorld and Cre8asite Forums.


Update: Remember the I’m Feeling Lucky Google Countdown feature? Well, at midnight, when you click it, this is what it looks like: Via websonic.nl



Smashing Highlights 2009


  

2009 was a very successful year for Smashing Magazine. It was a year of ambitious goals and an intense time schedule, which brought many changes over the past year. In 2009 we published more posts than ever (on average, 8 posts per week). We broadened our areas of interest: for instance, we explored freelancing and the business side of web development, but also tackled user interface design and mobile web design. We also discovered new formats, such as the “Global Web Design” series and Q&A-Sessions — unfortunately, the latter (the Ask SM series with Chris Coyier) lasted only a couple of months.

A3 in 100 (Really) Beautiful iPhone Wallpapers Tt2 in 100 (Really) Beautiful iPhone Wallpapers

We have tried our best to improve the quality of our articles so as to increase their value for designers and developers. In this post, we’ll review what has happened on Smashing Magazine over the past year: smashing highlights, setbacks, and small sensations of 2009 — which we present in a month by month timeline. You can compare the highlights of 2009 with those of 2008 or 2007 (which, by the way, include links to some really useful articles).

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2009 was a very successful year for Smashing Magazine. It was a year of ambitious goals and an intense time schedule, which brought many changes over the past year. In 2009 we published more posts than ever (on average, 8 posts per week). We broadened our areas of interest: for instance, we explored freelancing and the business side of web development, but also tackled user interface design and mobile web design. We also discovered new formats, such as the “Global Web Design” series and Q&A-Sessions — unfortunately, the latter (the Ask SM series with Chris Coyier) lasted only a couple of months.

src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/images/smashing-128.png" alt="Smashing-128 in Smashing Highlights 2009" width="128" height="128" />

None of this would have been possible without the tremendous support of our authors, contributors, and editorial staff. We express sincere gratitude to them for all the ideas and hard work they’ve put into articles published here on Smashing Magazine. We also want to thank you, the readers, for your attention, criticism, ideas, suggestions, emails, tweets, and links over the past year. Smashing Magazine is driven by your support which is why we are always listening to you and we truly appreciate every message we receive.

We have tried our best to improve the quality of our articles so as to increase their value for designers and developers. In this post, we’ll review what has happened on Smashing Magazine over the past year: smashing highlights, setbacks, and small sensations of 2009 — which we present in a month by month timeline. You can compare the highlights of 2009 with those of href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2008/12/22/smashing-highlights-2008/">2008 or href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2007/12/27/smashing-highlights-2007/">2007 (which, by the way, include links to some really useful articles).

January

The year starts with a rather lengthy post href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/01/06/100-really-beautiful-iphone-wallpapers/">100 (Really) Beautiful iPhone Wallpapers which actually doesn’t gain a lot of attention in January, but gains traffic significantly throughout the year. We start gathering material for this ultimate collection of iPhone wallpapers in early December and four writers help by selecting the most useful resources and the most beautiful wallpapers.

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/01/06/100-really-beautiful-iphone-wallpapers/"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/images/iphone-wallpapers/a3.jpg" alt="A3 in Smashing Highlights 2009" width="250" height="375" /> href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/01/06/100-really-beautiful-iphone-wallpapers/"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/images/iphone-wallpapers/tt2.jpg" alt="Tt2 in Smashing Highlights 2009" width="250" height="375" />

By far the most popular article of the month is href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/01/14/web-design-trends-for-2009/">Web Design Trends For 2009. We carefully examine what’s happening on the web in 2008 and came up with a couple of trends that we think will appear in the web design landscape in 2009. Some of our predictions turn out to be correct. And yes, we’re already preparing a similar post for 2010.

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/01/14/web-design-trends-for-2009/"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/images/web-design-trends-2009/letterpress6.jpg" alt="Letterpress6 in Smashing Highlights 2009" width="500" height="320" />

February

In February, Paul Boag reveals href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/02/10/10-harsh-truths-about-corporate-websites/">10 Harsh Truths About Corporate Websites. His article seems to speak from the heart of thousands of designers and developers. The article gets positive feedback and we even receive tweets from two corporate site owners who agree to keep the key points of the article in mind for future redesigns.

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/02/10/10-harsh-truths-about-corporate-websites/"> src="http://www.boagworld.com/blogImages/Zeldman-20090123-095155.jpg" alt="Zeldman-20090123-095155 in Smashing Highlights 2009" />

Also, Alexander Makarov takes a couple of work days off, tests 9 popular PHP IDEs, and presents a very detailed review of popular PHP IDEs in the article href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/02/11/the-big-php-ides-test-why-use-oneand-which-to-choose/">The Big PHP IDE Test: Why Use One And Which To Choose. He also prepares an extensive spreadsheet for public review. An editable version is available as well (we hope that other developers will voluntarily add reviews to other IDEs), however we are forced to close editing because of vandalism.

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/02/11/the-big-php-ides-test-why-use-oneand-which-to-choose/"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/images/php-ide-test/ides_best.png" alt="Ides Best in Smashing Highlights 2009" width="577" height="299" />

February is also a busy month for us and our readers. We announce a href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/02/23/hardware-giveaway-5000-comments-challenge/">Hardware Giveaway with almost 9000 comments — more comments than WordPress can handle at the time. Newer versions of WordPress offer comment pagination – probably added for that reason. We also href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/02/24/the-smashing-book-join-in/">announce the Smashing Book — our most important project in 2009. As you may know, there was a long road leading up to its final release in early December.

March

In March, we get technical. We publish articles related to href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/03/19/getting-started-with-ruby-on-rails/">Ruby On Rails, href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/03/25/mysql-admin-and-development-tools-round-up/">MySQL, href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/03/10/ultimate-round-up-for-version-control-with-subversion/">Subversion, and href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/03/24/10-useful-php-tips-revisited/">PHP. The latter is a first-ever rebuttal of one of our previous articles; it’s written by PHP gurus Chris Shiflett and Sean Cotes. They take a closer look at the previously published article, explain its errors and reveal what is right and wrong in its theory and practice. From this point on, we consider getting experts to technically review articles before they’re published.

The most popular post of the month is href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/03/08/70-new-useful-ajax-and-javascript-techniques/">70 New, Useful AJAX and JavaScript Techniques, prepared by Noura Yehia. We get back to our roots, to the good old days when we picked the best coding and design-related resources and present them in a well-researched round-up. Although many people have criticized the “list” article format, most readers still find such round-ups useful, so we continue publishing them. Over the course of the year we pushed lists back a bit, trying to publish more unique and thought-provoking content.

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/03/08/70-new-useful-ajax-and-javascript-techniques/"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/images/ajax-js-techniques/ajax-js-techniques36.jpg" alt="Ajax-js-techniques36 in Smashing Highlights 2009" />

The most controversial inspirational post of the month is definitely href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/03/20/30-beautiful-surreal-and-dark-art-pictures/">Bizarre Surreal and Dark Art Pictures, prepared by Aquil Akhter. The post doesn’t seem to leave anyone unaffected; some readers hate it, some readers love it, and it brings a large spike in traffic.

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/03/20/30-beautiful-surreal-and-dark-art-pictures/"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/images/dark-surreal-art/15.jpg" alt="15 in Smashing Highlights 2009" width="500" />

This month we also announce the href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/03/18/smashing-community-icon-set-join-in/">Smashing Community Icon Set where we ask readers what icons they need with plans to design the icons together with a professional icon design agency, then release them for free. Unfortunately, the winner — portfolio icon set — is still not ready (the design agency is working on some nifty features), but we hope to finally release the set in early 2010.

April

In March we start discussing with Jacob Gube what would be an interesting twist for April’s Fools Day and we come up with a nice idea. As a result, we publish Jacob Gube’s article href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/03/31/breaking-internet-explorer-81-eagle-eyes-leaked/">Breaking: Internet Explorer 8.1 Eagle Eyes Leaked. The article takes a look at the new version of Internet Explorer and claims that it has Mozilla Firefox extensions support, excellent performance against the Acid 3 test, and a server-side code decompiler. The news spreads across social media and the article gets a nice traffic spike through StumbleUpon.

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/03/31/breaking-internet-explorer-81-eagle-eyes-leaked/"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/images/ie8-eagle-eyes/intro.jpg" alt="Intro in Smashing Highlights 2009" width="425" height="340" />

In April, Rob Morris presents href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/04/20/5-simple-tricks-to-bring-light-and-shadow-into-your-designs/">5 Simple Tricks To Bring Light and Shadow Into Your Designs. In general, April turns out to be one of the best months of the year. We publish 47 articles related to very different topics (freelancing, graphics design, typography, CSS, conversion rates, logo design) and thus manage to cover a wide variety of topics — resulting in much positive feedback. Many readers, however, complain that we publish too often, so in the following months we begin to publish at a more moderate pace.

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/04/20/5-simple-tricks-to-bring-light-and-shadow-into-your-designs/"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/images/light-shadow-techniques/Fig_1.jpg" alt="Fig 1 in Smashing Highlights 2009" />

May

May turns out to be a practical month. We re-discover round-ups with very useful resources. We publish a round-up of href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/05/29/useful-glossaries-for-web-designers-and-developers/">useful glossaries, the ultimate general guide to industry terms that should get our readers well on their way to understanding what web designers are talking about. We also discuss href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/05/12/10-ways-to-put-your-content-in-front-of-more-people/">ways to put your content in front of more people.

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/05/29/useful-glossaries-for-web-designers-and-developers/"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/images/glossaries/typeface.gif" alt="Typeface in Smashing Highlights 2009" width="482" height="337" />

The most popular posts of the month are href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/05/06/40-stunning-and-creative-graffiti-artworks/">graffiti artworks and href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/05/18/100-amazing-free-wordpress-themes-for-2009/">Free WordPress Themes for 2009. Inspirational posts work well, but the appetite of our readers is growing. Over the coming months we begin to see a rise of resistance against inspirational posts which are labeled “lazy content”. We listen and do our best to improve the quality of inspirational posts while reducing the number of such posts and making room for more practical articles.

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/05/06/40-stunning-and-creative-graffiti-artworks/"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/images/creative-graffiti-art/loves.jpg" alt="Loves in Smashing Highlights 2009" width="500" height="375" />

June

June turns out to be a time for experiments. Because we observe a large number of Mac-users in our stats, we decide to publish a couple of Mac-related posts. We started slowly in May, and continued in June with href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/06/20/how-to-make-os-x-e2-80-99s-expose-work-5-productivity-tips/">Exposé tips and href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/06/04/30-must-have-tweaks-for-your-mac/">tweaks for your Mac. However, in the articles we’re not just praising Mac. As it turns out, if you want some traffic and discussions on your blog, banter Apple, its products, or fans. We do it and the article href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/06/10/why-web-developers-dont-need-a-mac/">Why Web Developers Don’t Need A Mac gets 655 comments. However, focusing articles on Mac is not a good idea — the feedback is very negative. After June we focus on more general design-related topics and let the Windows-Mac debate rest in peace.

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/06/10/why-web-developers-dont-need-a-mac/"> style="display: inline;" src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/images/why-web-developers-do-not-need-mac/win.jpg" alt="Win in Smashing Highlights 2009" width="500" height="431" />

The most remarkable posts of the month are Inayaili de Leon’s challenge to href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/06/15/take-your-design-to-the-next-level-with-css3/">take your design to the next level with CSS3 and Gareth Hardy’s discussion of href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/06/25/10-common-mistakes-in-logo-design/">common mistakes in logo design. One of the most useful posts of the year is Cameron Chapman’s round-up of href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/06/29/45-incredibly-useful-web-design-checklists-and-questionnaires/">web design checklists and questionnaires which performs fairly well in terms of traffic and user feedback.

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/06/15/take-your-design-to-the-next-level-with-css3/"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/css3-new-techniques/rgba.jpg" width="500" height="337" alt="Rgba in Smashing Highlights 2009" />

In general, through the first six months of the year, CSS-related articles perform best. We notice this and start looking for more professional CSS/JS-developers who have time for writing. We also intensify our cooperation with our current writers. The results are seen in the months to come.

July

July is another month with a wide variety of design-related topics. Our advanced readers learn about clever href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/07/15/clever-png-optimization-techniques/">PNG optimization techniques. The most-discussed article of the month is href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/07/09/the-roadmap-to-becoming-a-professional-freelance-web-designer/">The Roadmap To Becoming A Professional Freelance Web Designer. We start to get more requests for freelance-related topics, ranging from pricing to organization to project management. We carefully write down the most promising ideas and assign topics to regular and new authors.

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/07/01/clever-jpeg-optimization-techniques/"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/jpg-optimization-techniques/8grid-bad.jpg" alt="8grid-bad in Smashing Highlights 2009" />

We try to take our inspirational posts to a new level, making them more extensive and less random. Our first result is Diogo Terror’s article about href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/07/17/lessons-from-swiss-style-graphic-design/">Lessons From Swiss Style Graphic Design. The article goes to extreme lengths explaining various techniques from the time as well as showcasing beautiful Swiss style artworks. Unfortunately, very few readers appear to be interested. Although the article takes a couple weeks to prepare, the traffic is very low and it gets just 75 comments.

href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/uppercaseyyc/3185771455/sizes/l/in/set-72157612416406180/"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/swiss-graphic-design/52.jpg" alt="52 in Smashing Highlights 2009" width="480" height="473" />

We present the results of our Typographic Layout Design Contest in which we aim to collect beautiful typographic (X)HTML+CSS-based layouts created by the design community and release them for free. The response is overwhelming and we release href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/07/08/free-typographic-xhtmlcss-layouts-for-your-designs/">45 free typographic (X)HTML/CSS templates. Unfortunately, this is the last contest we offer in 2009. But no worries, new contests are coming in 2010!

August

In August we present the findings of our large href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/08/20/typographic-design-survey-best-practices-from-the-best-blogs/">study of typographic design practices in modern web design. We identify 13 general typographic problems and issues related to typographic design and present answers to them that we found through our research. Among other things, we discover the most popular typefaces, average font sizes, line height, and the number of characters per line. The study is extremely time-consuming, but we don’t care. The results are very useful and that’s what really matters.

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/08/20/typographic-design-survey-best-practices-from-the-best-blogs/"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/type-survey/aiga.gif" alt="Aiga in Smashing Highlights 2009" width="500" height="430" />

We publish a quite controversial article href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/08/27/if-famous-painters-were-web-designers/">If Famous Graphic Artists Were Web Designers… in which our author Francisco Inchauste explores inspirational paintings and artists who have influenced modern design. The article gains a lot of attention and instigates some rough discussions in the comments to the post.

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/08/27/if-famous-painters-were-web-designers/"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/art-paintings-designers/article_cover.jpg" alt="Article Cover in Smashing Highlights 2009" width="500" height="350" />

We explain how to code your first href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/08/04/designing-a-html-5-layout-from-scratch/">HTML 5 layout and your first href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/08/11/how-to-create-your-first-iphone-application/">iPhone application. And, of course, we publish probably the most bizarre post ever: href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/08/13/10-unique-tv-series-episodes-that-inspire-creativity/">Unique TV Series Episodes That Inspire Creativity, written by Louis Lazaris. It’s a review of how particular TV episodes were different from what came before, and how this can serve as motivation for future designs. The article doesn’t make sense for some readers, but most are quite intrigued, which is a good sign.

September

September starts unpleasantly for Smashing Magazine. href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/09/04/smashing-goes-down-on-september-2nd-what-happened/">We are under siege. Someone attempts to infiltrate our main server and manages to manipulate some HTML data. The consequence: a new server (we moved from a cluster to the cloud), a new internal security policy (which still causes some problems for us and appears to be a bit too restrictive), secure FTP and, of course, more costs.

href="http://twitter.com/smashingmag/status/3718994026"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/twitter11.gif" alt="Twitter11 in Smashing Highlights 2009" width="573" height="398" />

We need a little time to recover, but get back on track quite quickly. We follow the attack with a few involved, thought-provoking articles: in the article href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/09/10/css-wishlist-new-ideas-debates-and-solutions/">CSS Wishlist: New Ideas, Debates and Solutions Kayla Knight discusses the current state of CSS and describes some alternative CSS syntaxes and CSS programming concepts as well as already-available techniques and tools. We reveal href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/09/03/professional-team-management-tips-for-creative-folks/">professional team management tips as well as the href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/09/17/portfolio-design-study-design-patterns-and-current-practices/">findings of our portfolio design study.

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/09/03/professional-team-management-tips-for-creative-folks/"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/team-management/banner.jpg" alt="Banner in Smashing Highlights 2009" />

Many coding articles on Smashing Magazine cover various WordPress-related tips, tricks and techniques. Almost every month we published at least two articles related to WordPress; in September we published one of the most popular WordPress-related posts of the year: href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/09/14/how-to-integrate-facebook-with-wordpress/">How To Integrate Facebook With WordPress, written by Thiemo Fetzer. You can bet that we will continue publishing more WordPress-related articles in 2010.

Also in this month, Jon Tan helps us to create the Smashing Experts Panel: because some articles were incorrect or contained factual errors, we invite experts and professional designers and developers to do paid reviews of Smashing Magazine’s articles before they’re published. As of this writing, we have over 25 experts in the panel. This turns out to be bittersweet news for our authors: editing and feedback now need more time and authors need to be more precise in their articles.

October

The last few months of the year are months of big changes for us and for our readers. In October, for the first time in our young history, we acquire an existing website, href="http://www.noupe.com/spotlight/noupe-has-a-new-owner-smashing-magazine.html">Noupe.com, created in 2007 by the Egyptian Blogger Noura Yehia. At the moment Noupe has a regular publishing schedule and is updated as frequently as Smashing Magazine.

In October, Louis Lazaris explains href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/10/14/css-differences-in-internet-explorer-6-7-and-8/">CSS Differences in Internet Explorer 6, 7 and 8 which is a new format for Smashing Magazine. For the first time, we’re publishing a useful reference article that can be looked up when our readers are handling browser inconsistency issues. And it works; the article has 238 comments and gains organic traffic from search engines. Also, in October we start our new series “Global Web Design” in which we feature web developers and web designs from different countries of the world and explore what’s happening in the web design scene worldwide. We start with href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/10/17/global-web-design-russia/">Russian Web Design. The new series is a success, so you can expect more exciting posts in the series in 2010.

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/10/17/global-web-design-russia/"> width="500" height="377" alt="145-russian-web-design in Smashing Highlights 2009" src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/145-russian-web-design.jpg" />

Apart from classic CSS and usability posts, the month brings many original articles. For instance, href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/10/24/brand-user-experience-the-interface-of-a-cheeseburger/">Brand = User Experience: The Interface of a Cheeseburger. Our readers share their excitement about the original content and want to see similar posts on Smashing Magazine in the future. We listen and start preparing other thought-provoking articles in the months to come. And, of course, it was pretty cool to put the image of a tasty cheeseburger on Smashing Magazine’s front page. We’re sure no design-related blog has done that before!

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/10/24/brand-user-experience-the-interface-of-a-cheeseburger/"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/brand-ux/cb.jpg" width="435" height="263" alt="Cb in Smashing Highlights 2009" Brand=User Experience: The Interface of a Cheeseburger" />

Important to us was title="Edit “Smashing Magazine’s Redesign and Smashing Network”" href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/10/31/smashing-magazines-redesign-and-smashing-network/">Smashing Magazine’s Redesign and the Smashing Network. The redesign is done by Liam McKay and his design agency, WeFunction. However, we subsequently tweaked a couple of things in the design (and Liam is still unhappy about these changes). Footer and sidebar illustrations are designed by Pasquale D’Silva. The idea behind the network is to promote high-quality content on the Web design scene and to make it worthwhile for publishers to produce useful and interesting design-related articles. We want our community to benefit from these articles and support the publishers with direct traffic from Smashing Magazine.

class="alignnone size-full wp-image-22991" src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/editorial.gif" alt="Editorial in Smashing Highlights 2009" width="209" height="230" />

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/the-smashing-network/"> class="alignnone size-full wp-image-22706" src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/sn-badge-250px-colour-3.png" alt="Sn-badge-250px-colour-3 in Smashing Highlights 2009" width="255" height="98" />

November

November is another important month for us. Finally, after 3 years of working in different cities, we move to our first joined office in Freiburg (Germany). This is also the reason why the rest of the year is a bit hectic: there are literally hundreds of things that had to be considered, discussed, and taken care of.

Probably the most practical article of the month is Kat Neville’s post about href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/11/05/invoice-like-a-pro/">invoice design. The article presents some general guidelines, best practices and examples that will help you make sure your invoices are up to spec. Some articles need tremendous work and vivid discussions before they finally get published. One of these is href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/11/02/the-ails-of-typographic-anti-aliasing/">The Ails Of Typographic Anti-Aliasing by Thomas Giannattasio. Can you spot all the hours of work that were put into it?

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/11/05/invoice-like-a-pro/"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/invoice-design/nancyroy_thumb.jpg" alt="Nancyroy Thumb in Smashing Highlights 2009" width="480" height="367" />

In November we have quite a surprise for our readers. Together with Paddy Donnelly, we discuss creating a spectacular post that covers a recent trend in modern web design: magazine-style blog post designs, or art-directed blog posts. Paddy refers to it as a ‘blogazine’. After four weeks of preparation, the article href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/the-death-of-the-blog-post/">The death of the boring blog post? finally goes live. The surprise is that when a user clicks on the link to the post, he lands on a page which has a layout and design that’s completely different from the rest of Smashing Magazine. According to our stats, many users reloaded the page wondering where the “usual” layout had gone.

href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/the-death-of-the-blog-post/"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/images/blogazine-layout/jason1.png" alt="Jason1 in Smashing Highlights 2009" />

The article is one of the best posts of 2009, as it manages to spark a huge discussion in the design community and gains over 550 comments. The readers are in disagreement about the design of the article, but the idea is inspiring and shortly after it’s published we start to see a couple of emerging new ‘blogazines’.

December

Finally. href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/12/03/smashing-book-its-out-now/">The Smashing Book is released. Announced in February, and discussed in several posts throughout the year, in December it finally arrives. Actually, you can href="http://shop.smashingmagazine.com/smashingbook-dispatcher.php?utm_source=Smashing%2BMagazine&utm_medium=editorial&utm_content=release_announcement&utm_campaign=Smashing%2BBook">buy the Smashing Book right now, available exclusively from Smashing Magazine — all orders are now shipped right away. This one was really hard work and most things didn’t work out as we had planned, but the positive reactions and impressions of our readers are definitely worth it. We see huge involvement from our readers who post their images, videos, tweets and reviews in social media. Feedback is overwhelming and users’ expectations are high. The coming months will show how well we did our job with the book.

href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/agence-lunaweb/4203344441/"> src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/sm-book.jpg" width="500" height="375" alt="Sm-book in Smashing Highlights 2009" /> /> href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/agence-lunaweb/4203344441/">Image source

Among other news, in December we hire our regular writer Cameron Chapman — she becomes the editorial manager on Smashing Magazine. Cameron is a professional writer, web- and graphic designer with over 6 years of experience. She will still be writing articles for Smashing Magazine, but now she also handles communication between many of our new and regular authors, discussing article ideas with them.

In terms of content, December turns out to be a slow month with less traffic and fewer comments — apparently, our readers have other things to take care of. Still, we keep publishing useful and original content. We explain how you can href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/12/02/pushing-your-buttons-with-practical-css3/">push your buttons with CSS3 and href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/12/01/how-to-support-internet-explorer-and-still-be-cutting-edge/">support IE and still be cutting-edge.

In December, we publish the most challenging article of the year: we encourage our readers to href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/12/22/design-something-every-day/">design something every day for the next 365 days. We encourage participants to tweet each new design along with #daily365 so that everyone will can see the progress of each project. Some designers are already participating! So are you up for the challenge?

What should you expect in 2010?

We’re planning some big changes in the coming months. Soon we will release the Smashing Network Widget for your website and a mobile version of Smashing Magazine. Well-known authors and experts are currently writing articles for us. You can also expect to see more new team members and newly released books in cooperation with a publishing house. Also, the translation of the Smashing Book to other languages (currently only Korean version) is being prepared. We also have some interesting plans for Smashing Magazine and the design community, so you better stay tuned to our updates in 2010.

class="alignnone size-full wp-image-22985" src="http://media.smashingmagazine.com/cdn_smash/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/0470684151.jpg" alt="0470684151 in Smashing Highlights 2009" width="300" height="391" />

We’ll do our best to deliver useful and inspiring high-quality articles in the new year. We’ll come up with new ideas to keep Smashing Magazine an exciting place. And we’ll be listening to your ideas, suggestions, complaints and criticism. Have a truly smashing, successful, healthy and peaceful new year in 2010!

What was the most memorable Smashing Magazine post in 2009?

Your opinion has always been very important to us. Please share your impressions about our work over the last year and let us know what you would like to see changed on Smashing Magazine in 2010. Also, what was your most memorable Smashing Magazine’s post in 2009? We’ll do our best to improve Smashing Magazine in the new year!

(ll)

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© Smashing Editorial for href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com">Smashing Magazine, 2009. | href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/12/29/smashing-highlights-2009/">Permalink | href="http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/12/29/smashing-highlights-2009/#comments">73 comments | title="Bookmark in del.icio.us" href="http://del.icio.us/post?url=http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/12/29/smashing-highlights-2009/&title=Smashing%20Highlights%202009">Add to del.icio.us | title="Bookmark in Digg" href="http://digg.com/submit?phase=2&url=http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/12/29/smashing-highlights-2009/">Digg this | title="Stumble on StumbleUpon" href="http://www.stumbleupon.com/submit?url=http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/12/29/smashing-highlights-2009/">Stumble on StumbleUpon! | title="Tweet us!" href="http://twitter.com/home?status=@tweetmeme%20@smashingmag%20Reading%20'Smashing%20Highlights%202009'%20http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/12/29/smashing-highlights-2009/">Tweet it! | title="Bookmark in Reddit" href="http://reddit.com/submit?url=http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/12/29/smashing-highlights-2009/">Submit to Reddit | href="http://forum.smashingmagazine.com/">Forum Smashing Magazine
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Google Blogger & Webmaster Tools Verification Bug

A Google Webmaster Help thread, written in Italian, has confirmed reports of a bug between Google’s Blogger and Google Webmaster Tools.

Dennis G. from the Google Webmaster Team, who is specifically involved in the verification process, wrote in a Google Webmaster Help thread:”

It looks like we have a bug in our blogger integration. I’ll go fix that. In the meanwhile, try verifying by meta tag instead.

It seems like he is the man that actually goes in to fix the “bug.” How cool is that?

In any event, if you are having problems verifying your Blogger blog with Google Webmaster Tools, know that you are not alone.

There is no ETA for the fix, but Dennis made it sound like it is a quick fix.

Forum discussion at Google Webmaster Help.


A Google Webmaster Help thread, written in Italian, has confirmed reports of a bug between Google’s Blogger and Google Webmaster Tools.

Dennis G. from the Google Webmaster Team, who is specifically involved in the verification process, wrote in a Google Webmaster Help thread:”

It looks like we have a bug in our blogger integration. I’ll go fix that. In the meanwhile, try verifying by meta tag instead.

It seems like he is the man that actually goes in to fix the “bug.” How cool is that?

In any event, if you are having problems verifying your Blogger blog with Google Webmaster Tools, know that you are not alone.

There is no ETA for the fix, but Dennis made it sound like it is a quick fix.

Forum discussion at Google Webmaster Help.



Google & Lightbox JavaScript: Can GoogleBot Index Images in Lightbox JS?

A WebmasterWorld thread has discussion around getting Google to index a popular image feature sites use to show off images on their web site. It is called Lightbox JS and it basically uses JavaScript to open up a neat larger view of the image on the page.

I use it on many sites, but you can see a quick example on the RustyBrick Mobile Portfolio. Just click on the image and it opens up a larger picture of that image. Here is a screen capture showing the larger image as it overlays on top of the page:

Lightbox & Google

The issue is, GoogleBot is having a tough time capturing these images in their index. WebmasterWorld administrator, Tedster, explained:

I’ve been up against the same challenge. Even though regular Google search is aggressively discovering URLs and content by spidering JavaScript, apparently the image bot is not so inquisitive at this point. This surprised me, because there are many images being displayed through Lightbox scripts these days.

Yes, GoogleBot is able to execute JavaScript, but is GoogleImageBot able to at the same pace?

Tedster is exploring other ways to get GoogleBot to index Lightbox JS. He tried the following method, but it doesn’t seem to work:

My latest attempt involves making the anchor part of the link a thumbnail image – but the thumbnail is not just a smaller version of the larger image. I use the same exact image file for the anchor, but I resize it on the the page with the HTML width and height attributes. This means that the page loads more slowly, but at least the image bot gets a direct <img src=[url]> style mark-up.

If you have a solution, let us know.

Forum discussion at WebmasterWorld.


A WebmasterWorld thread has discussion around getting Google to index a popular image feature sites use to show off images on their web site. It is called Lightbox JS and it basically uses JavaScript to open up a neat larger view of the image on the page.

I use it on many sites, but you can see a quick example on the RustyBrick Mobile Portfolio. Just click on the image and it opens up a larger picture of that image. Here is a screen capture showing the larger image as it overlays on top of the page:

Lightbox & Google

The issue is, GoogleBot is having a tough time capturing these images in their index. WebmasterWorld administrator, Tedster, explained:

I’ve been up against the same challenge. Even though regular Google search is aggressively discovering URLs and content by spidering JavaScript, apparently the image bot is not so inquisitive at this point. This surprised me, because there are many images being displayed through Lightbox scripts these days.

Yes, GoogleBot is able to execute JavaScript, but is GoogleImageBot able to at the same pace?

Tedster is exploring other ways to get GoogleBot to index Lightbox JS. He tried the following method, but it doesn’t seem to work:

My latest attempt involves making the anchor part of the link a thumbnail image – but the thumbnail is not just a smaller version of the larger image. I use the same exact image file for the anchor, but I resize it on the the page with the HTML width and height attributes. This means that the page loads more slowly, but at least the image bot gets a direct <img src=[url]> style mark-up.

If you have a solution, let us know.

Forum discussion at WebmasterWorld.



Merry Christmas All & Googlers Working Today

Merry Christmas! Although I have about five items to write about today, I figured I hold off on them until Monday. Trust me, I know how it is to be swamped and buried in feeds and news to catch up on while I am celebrating a Jewish holiday – so I will spare you all. Plus, I finally am making the move to Google Chrome, using Chromium on my Mac – so it is nice to take it slow to get up to speed on it.

If you are reading today, make sure to check out our Christmas logos for 2009, which I just updated this morning to add several more logos from other search engines. In short, there are logos from Google, Yahoo, Bing, Ask.com, and many others – so check it out.

In addition, I caught Googlers working on Christmas again. For the past few years, I have caught Googlers helping webmasters in the forums. This year is no different. JohnMu from Google posted in at least two threads on Christmas eve. One was the Merry Christmas Google thread and the other was a more technical webmaster question. Googlers did the same in 2008, 2007 and 2006. They also worked on New Years last year and the year before.

Finally, I will be working on my weekly search video recap today. Expect it to go live later today and you can watch (or just listen to) it at your leisure.

Merry Christmas and in our tradition, forum discussion at Search Engine Roundtable Forums, Cre8asite Forums, Google Toolbar Help, HighRankings Forums, WebmasterWorld, DigitalPoint Forums, Google Maps Help, Google AdWords Help & Google Webmaster Help.


Merry Christmas! Although I have about five items to write about today, I figured I hold off on them until Monday. Trust me, I know how it is to be swamped and buried in feeds and news to catch up on while I am celebrating a Jewish holiday – so I will spare you all. Plus, I finally am making the move to Google Chrome, using Chromium on my Mac – so it is nice to take it slow to get up to speed on it.

If you are reading today, make sure to check out our Christmas logos for 2009, which I just updated this morning to add several more logos from other search engines. In short, there are logos from Google, Yahoo, Bing, Ask.com, and many others – so check it out.

In addition, I caught Googlers working on Christmas again. For the past few years, I have caught Googlers helping webmasters in the forums. This year is no different. JohnMu from Google posted in at least two threads on Christmas eve. One was the Merry Christmas Google thread and the other was a more technical webmaster question. Googlers did the same in 2008, 2007 and 2006. They also worked on New Years last year and the year before.

Finally, I will be working on my weekly search video recap today. Expect it to go live later today and you can watch (or just listen to) it at your leisure.

Merry Christmas and in our tradition, forum discussion at Search Engine Roundtable Forums, Cre8asite Forums, Google Toolbar Help, HighRankings Forums, WebmasterWorld, DigitalPoint Forums, Google Maps Help, Google AdWords Help & Google Webmaster Help.



Link Marketing Challenges & Solutions

Two of the biggest obstacles companies face in link marketing are developing linkable content and making people aware of it. The key to success in these areas is to widen the scope of places where you get ideas. …

Two of the biggest obstacles companies face in link marketing are developing linkable content and making people aware of it. The key to success in these areas is to widen the scope of places where you get ideas. …

How Personalized Search Changes SEO (and Doesn’t)

Posted by randfish

Earlier this month, Google launched personalized results by default for all users. SEOs should have already read Danny Sullivan’s analysis of the shift (which is quite excellent) and I also suggest checking out David Harry’s Guide on the topic. Sadly, despite some good advice, it appears that a lot of folks are still worried that this is somehow the "end of SEO" or demands a "completely new look at SEO practices." Let’s do a brief analysis:

What’s the Impact for SEOs?

  • Rank Checking is Less Universally Accurate
    While not the biggest tragedy, it’s certainly a bit frustrating to know that rank tracking (manually or with tools) may provide somewhat less authoritative data than before. Though, to be honest, rank tracking has always been about establishing a baseline, not about exact results (see previous posts on this). Still, if you’ve been using this data to see how you fluctuate in the "normal" (non-personalized or geo-targeted) results, it’s still solid for that purpose and may actually help you determine if you’re gaining or losing in the new, personalized world (if you get more traffic but rankings stay the same, personalized might be helping; if you gain rankings but don’t proportionally benefit in search traffic, it may be hurting).
    _
  • The Rich Get (Even) Richer
    Those at the top of the results, who "own" the queries around their niches are likely to benefit disproportionately as mid and long tail queries that would once have shown more alternative sources will now bring up those "previously visited" sites even if their traditional relevance and popularity scores wouldn’t have earned them a top position. This will likely contribute to some lowered diversity in the results, but may help fight against low quality re-publishers and content aggregators in favor of trusted brands.
    _
  • User Experience & Branding Boost SEO (Even More)
    It’s always been critical to make users love your site, but now the direct SEO impact can be felt even more strongly. Sites and brands that "suck at SEO" may even find themselves performing better if their users love them and the pages are, at least, accessible to engines. I’m buying Steve Krug’s new book – Rocket Surgery Made Easy - ASAP either way :-)
    _
  • Buying Traffic May Now Help Organic Results
    If Google really is using signals from all sources of data, the paid results and their impact on search and visit history might now give a boost (indirectly) to positioning in the organic results. In fact, it could be that even services like Google AdSense or other paid advertising that leads a visitor who’s logged in to their Google account and using the toolbar (or other detectable methods of tracking) will "count" towards the personalization metrics. I expect lots of SEOs to start testing and reporting on this soon.
    _

What Should We Do Differently in our Campaigns?

  • Get More Visitors (Any Way We Can)
    Depending on how Google is counting visits and traffic (which they haven’t and probably won’t ever fully disclose), any way you can drag a visitor to your site and give them a good experience is likely to positively contribute to your chances of ranking better in personalized results.
    _
  • Improve Brand Loyalty
    SEOs haven’t classically focused on brand metrics and branding as a marketing practice, but it’s long past due. The benefits of building a strong brand are evident everywhere in the consumer (and B2B) marketplace. Now Google’s giving us one more reason (and a more direct one at that) to start earning visitors’ love and, in turn, be rewarded by higher rankings. 
    _
  • More Tightly Integrate Metrics w/ Rank Tracking
    Again, this has been a wise move long before personalization, but with the expansion comes renewed need for weaving together the 3rd-party tracking of rankings with the traffic metrics from your analytics to provide a full picture of how your site is performing in the search engines.
    _

The big takeaway here is that these action items aren’t particularly groundbreaking. We should have been doing all of these as responsible, effective Internet marketers anyway.

Is this a Major, Tectonic Shift in SEO?

No. I’m maintaining my previous stance that unless a shift from Google fundamentally changes the classic SEO process:

  1. Make pages accessible
  2. Target with keywords that searchers employ
  3. Build content that users will find useful and valuable
  4. Earn editorial links from good sources

It doesn’t qualify as a "tectonic" or "massive" or "fundamental" change in SEO. The best practices we’ve been recommending to clients, developers and content creators for the last half-decade are actually less impacted by this change than by some of the other items we’ve encountered recently (Bing + Yahoo! combining, real-time results at the top of query results, more vertical results in the SERPs, etc.). These latter examples call for much more active changes, learnings and direct action on the part of SEOs vs. personalization, which by-and-large just strengthens the reasons for best practices we’ve long known to exist.

p.s. Tomorrow evening at 6pm (Tuesday Dec. 22nd), I’ll be attending an informal SEO meetup in San Diego, CA at the Gordon Biersch Brewery in Mission Valley5010 Mission Center Road San Diego, CA 92108. Hope to see some of you there before the holidays!

Do you like this post? Yes No

Posted by randfish

Earlier this month, Google launched personalized results by default for all users. SEOs should have already read Danny Sullivan’s analysis of the shift (which is quite excellent) and I also suggest checking out David Harry’s Guide on the topic. Sadly, despite some good advice, it appears that a lot of folks are still worried that this is somehow the "end of SEO" or demands a "completely new look at SEO practices." Let’s do a brief analysis:

What’s the Impact for SEOs?

  • Rank Checking is Less Universally Accurate
    While not the biggest tragedy, it’s certainly a bit frustrating to know that rank tracking (manually or with tools) may provide somewhat less authoritative data than before. Though, to be honest, rank tracking has always been about establishing a baseline, not about exact results (see previous posts on this). Still, if you’ve been using this data to see how you fluctuate in the "normal" (non-personalized or geo-targeted) results, it’s still solid for that purpose and may actually help you determine if you’re gaining or losing in the new, personalized world (if you get more traffic but rankings stay the same, personalized might be helping; if you gain rankings but don’t proportionally benefit in search traffic, it may be hurting).
    _
  • The Rich Get (Even) Richer
    Those at the top of the results, who "own" the queries around their niches are likely to benefit disproportionately as mid and long tail queries that would once have shown more alternative sources will now bring up those "previously visited" sites even if their traditional relevance and popularity scores wouldn’t have earned them a top position. This will likely contribute to some lowered diversity in the results, but may help fight against low quality re-publishers and content aggregators in favor of trusted brands.
    _
  • User Experience & Branding Boost SEO (Even More)
    It’s always been critical to make users love your site, but now the direct SEO impact can be felt even more strongly. Sites and brands that "suck at SEO" may even find themselves performing better if their users love them and the pages are, at least, accessible to engines. I’m buying Steve Krug’s new book – Rocket Surgery Made Easy - ASAP either way :-)
    _
  • Buying Traffic May Now Help Organic Results
    If Google really is using signals from all sources of data, the paid results and their impact on search and visit history might now give a boost (indirectly) to positioning in the organic results. In fact, it could be that even services like Google AdSense or other paid advertising that leads a visitor who’s logged in to their Google account and using the toolbar (or other detectable methods of tracking) will "count" towards the personalization metrics. I expect lots of SEOs to start testing and reporting on this soon.
    _

What Should We Do Differently in our Campaigns?

  • Get More Visitors (Any Way We Can)
    Depending on how Google is counting visits and traffic (which they haven’t and probably won’t ever fully disclose), any way you can drag a visitor to your site and give them a good experience is likely to positively contribute to your chances of ranking better in personalized results.
    _
  • Improve Brand Loyalty
    SEOs haven’t classically focused on brand metrics and branding as a marketing practice, but it’s long past due. The benefits of building a strong brand are evident everywhere in the consumer (and B2B) marketplace. Now Google’s giving us one more reason (and a more direct one at that) to start earning visitors’ love and, in turn, be rewarded by higher rankings. 
    _
  • More Tightly Integrate Metrics w/ Rank Tracking
    Again, this has been a wise move long before personalization, but with the expansion comes renewed need for weaving together the 3rd-party tracking of rankings with the traffic metrics from your analytics to provide a full picture of how your site is performing in the search engines.
    _

The big takeaway here is that these action items aren’t particularly groundbreaking. We should have been doing all of these as responsible, effective Internet marketers anyway.

Is this a Major, Tectonic Shift in SEO?

No. I’m maintaining my previous stance that unless a shift from Google fundamentally changes the classic SEO process:

  1. Make pages accessible
  2. Target with keywords that searchers employ
  3. Build content that users will find useful and valuable
  4. Earn editorial links from good sources

It doesn’t qualify as a "tectonic" or "massive" or "fundamental" change in SEO. The best practices we’ve been recommending to clients, developers and content creators for the last half-decade are actually less impacted by this change than by some of the other items we’ve encountered recently (Bing + Yahoo! combining, real-time results at the top of query results, more vertical results in the SERPs, etc.). These latter examples call for much more active changes, learnings and direct action on the part of SEOs vs. personalization, which by-and-large just strengthens the reasons for best practices we’ve long known to exist.

p.s. Tomorrow evening at 6pm (Tuesday Dec. 22nd), I’ll be attending an informal SEO meetup in San Diego, CA at the Gordon Biersch Brewery in Mission Valley5010 Mission Center Road San Diego, CA 92108. Hope to see some of you there before the holidays!

Do you like this post? Yes No

Geo Targeting Techniques in Google for SEO

It has been observed by the SEO community over a number of years that search engine rankings in Google are influenced by a so-called geo-targeting aspect of the domain TLD and registrant s background location and its hosting location. In this article we ll look into those factors that affect Google s geo-targeting aspects so you can put them to work on your own web site….

Microsoft SQL Server® Value Calculator Reduce Costs & Increase Value with Microsoft SQL Server® 2008. Download Today!

It has been observed by the SEO community over a number of years that search engine rankings in Google are influenced by a so-called geo-targeting aspect of the domain TLD and registrant s background location and its hosting location. In this article we ll look into those factors that affect Google s geo-targeting aspects so you can put them to work on your own web site….

Microsoft SQL Server® Value Calculator Reduce Costs & Increase Value with Microsoft SQL Server® 2008. Download Today!

Google Holiday Logos, Also Yahoo, Bing & YouTube Winter Logos

The next two weeks are typically the slowest two weeks in the search industry (and probably most other industries). It is the holiday week, with Christmas and New Years coming, as well as it being the first day of Winter today.

Google already started their holiday logo blast, although Google missed Chanukah this year, they are calling the logos “Holiday logos”. You will be able to see a new one every day and Google will archive them at google.com/logos/holidays-2009.html. Here is the first one:

Google Holiday Logo #1 2009

Like I said, Google will have a new logo each day (maybe I will update this post here or make a new one for those).

Google # 2:

Google Holiday Logo #2 2009

Yahoo is running a flash based logo also for the past few days:

But today is actually the first day of Winter here on our side of the world. And for the day, we have a nice theme from Bing, YouTube and from ourselves as well:

Bing Winter:
Bing Winter Theme

YouTube Winter:
YouTube Winter Logo

Search Engine Roundtable Winter:

First Day of Winter at SERoundtable.com

Happy holidays, cold winter and relaxing/healthy next two weeks.

Forum discussion at Search Engine Roundtable Forums and Google Web Search Help.


The next two weeks are typically the slowest two weeks in the search industry (and probably most other industries). It is the holiday week, with Christmas and New Years coming, as well as it being the first day of Winter today.

Google already started their holiday logo blast, although Google missed Chanukah this year, they are calling the logos “Holiday logos”. You will be able to see a new one every day and Google will archive them at google.com/logos/holidays-2009.html. Here is the first one:

Google Holiday Logo #1 2009

Like I said, Google will have a new logo each day (maybe I will update this post here or make a new one for those).

Google # 2:

Google Holiday Logo #2 2009

Yahoo is running a flash based logo also for the past few days:

But today is actually the first day of Winter here on our side of the world. And for the day, we have a nice theme from Bing, YouTube and from ourselves as well:

Bing Winter:
Bing Winter Theme

YouTube Winter:
YouTube Winter Logo

Search Engine Roundtable Winter:

First Day of Winter at SERoundtable.com

Happy holidays, cold winter and relaxing/healthy next two weeks.

Forum discussion at Search Engine Roundtable Forums and Google Web Search Help.



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