28 August 2005
Google Techs, 'Algoholics' Match Wits
Free-flowing beer, live music, karaoke and arcade
games kept the party raging at the Googleplex the
other night, but the real action was unfolding inside
a sterile conference room at Google's (Nasdaq: GOOG)
Latest News about Google headquarters.
That's where the cunning Internet Learn how the leader
in Internet services can help you start and grow your
business online. Network Solutions. Go Farther. entrepreneurs
who constantly try to manipulate Google's search engine
results for a competitive edge were trying to make
the most of a rare opportunity to match wits face-to-face
with the company's top engineers.
Google's code-talking experts, despite putting on
a show of being helpful, weren't about to reveal their
"secret sauce" -- Google's tightly guarded
formula for ranking Web sites.
But that didn't zap the energy from the "Google
Dance" -- an annual summer party that's become
a metaphor for the behind-the-scenes twists and turns
that can cause Web sites to rise and fall in Google's
search results.
Window of Opportunity
For the millions of Web sites without a well-known
domain name Latest News about domain name, those rankings
can mean the difference between success or failure
because Google's search engine drives so much of the
Internet's traffic.
"Being on the first page of Google's results
is like gold," said Web site consultant Gordon
Liametz, one of the roughly 2,000 guests at this year's
party, held earlier this month at Google's colorful
corporate campus.
The Web site administrators, known as webmasters,
and their consultants paid particularly close attention
to Google engineer Matt Cutts, the company's main
liaison with the webmaster community and this party's
star attraction.
"That's the Mick Jagger of search!" exclaimed
e-marketing strategist Seth Wilde as he strolled by
Cutts and his audience of webmasters.
Cutts, who has worked at Google for five years, sees
it differently.
"I feel more like the Rick Moranis of search
because I end up dealing with so many quirky and weird
cases," he said.
Doing Whatever It Takes
With so much at stake, low-ranked Web sites spend
much time and money trying to elevate their standing,
even if they must resort to deception.
The tactics include "keyword stuffing"
-- peppering a Web page with phrases associated with
a specific topic such as "laptop computers"
in hopes of duping the software "spiders"
that troll the Internet to feed Google's growing search
index.
It's a risky strategy because Google and other search
engines penalize Web sites that get caught gratuitously
repeating the same word. In the worst cases, the offending
Web sites are deleted from the index so they don't
show up in search results at all.
Sometimes webmasters collude to populate their sites
with a large number of incoming links from other sites.
This approach makes a site appear more authoritative
and popular than it really is and thus rise in rankings.
Such dirty tricks pollute the search results with
Web sites that have little to do with a user's request,
frustrating consumers, diminishing Google's credibility
and threatening to undermine the company's profits
by driving users to its rivals.
Not surprisingly, Google works hard to thwart the
mischief makers, sometimes branded as "Black
Hats" because of their subterfuge.
Engineers frequently tweak the algorithms that determine
the rankings, sometimes causing Web sites perched
at the top to fall a few notches or, worse, even plunge
to the back pages of the results.
Google's reshuffling raised so many anxieties that
webmasters in 2002 began to name the changes after
hurricanes and infamous events. One particularly unpopular
change Google rolled out in 2003 was dubbed "Florida"
after the muddled ballot count in the 2000 presidential
election.
If You Can't Beat Them Completely ...
Hoping to ease the tensions with webmasters, Google
hatched the idea of its "dance" party during
an annual search engine convention held in Silicon
Valley, Calif., just a few miles from Google's headquarters.
The company invited some of the Black Hats, effectively
welcoming the foxes into the hen house.
"Google realized it was never going to get rid
of these [Black Hats], so it decided it may as well
work with them," Chris Winfield, a Google Dance
party veteran who runs 10e20, a search engine marketing
firm. "Until then, it always seemed like it was
'us against them."'
Wilde, who works for Denver-based Web consultant
Viewmark, puts it more bluntly: "Google is smart.
You always try to keep your enemies close to you."
The guests have mostly behaved themselves, although
a couple years ago there was an unsuccessful attempt
to steal one of Google's couches. "We bring in
extra security Security, strength, a lower TCO: find
out about all the advantages of IBM Middleware on
Linux. -- just in case," Cutts said.
The efforts to outsmart Google gall some webmasters
such as Shari Thurow, who believes the best way to
increase a site's search engine ranking is to offer
valuable content and products. She describes the Black
Hats as "pathetic algoholics" because they
are so obsessed with trying to figure out Google's
algorithms.
"A lot of these people just don't know how to
build user-friendly sites," said Thurow, a Google
Dance attendee who runs Carpentersville, Ill.-based
Grantastic Designs Inc. "If you build a site
for human beings, your site naturally gets search
engine traffic."
Paid Performance
There's also a more direct way to the top of the
Google's rankings: Just pay the search engine for
the right to have a Web site linked to specific keywords
entered into the request box. For instance, a Manhattan
hotel might pay top dollar for the words "travel
New York" to ensure its site is displayed in
the "sponsored links" section on top and
to the right of Google's regular results.
But ads can get expensive, and many Web surfers simply
refuse to click on them, so being on top of the regular
results is key, said Richard Hagerty, chief executive
of Impaqt, a Bridgeville, Pa., search engine consultant
who wasn't at the party.
Google knows it can't entirely avoid Black Hats.
"There are people who make their entire living
off of Google, which is fine, as long as they don't
push things too far," said Peter Norvig, Google's
director of search quality.
But he said webmasters searching for secrets are
better off looking elsewhere.
"Everything you ever wanted to know about Google
is right there on the [online] forums that the webmasters
run," Norvig said. "There is a lot of truth
in there, but there's also a lot of crazy stuff. We
just don't tell them which is which."